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British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000: A History and Bibliography of 'Little Magazines'
 9780712363570, 9780712349413

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BRITISH POETRY MAGAZINES

A History and Bibliography of'Little Magazines'

BRITISH POETRY MAGAZINES

A History and Bibliography

of'Little Magazines' Compiled by David Miller and Richard Price

THE BRITISH LIBRARY AND

OAK KNOLL PR-ESS

© 2006 David Miller and Richard Price

First published in 2006 by The British Library 96 Euston R.oad London NWI 2DB and Oak Knoll Press 310 Delaware Street NewCastle DE 19720 ISBN 1-58456-197-1 (Oak Knoll) ISBN 0-7123-4941-3 (BL) Cataloguing in Publication Data A eIP record for this book is available from both The British Library and the Library of Congress Designed and typeset in Quadraat by Geoff Green Book Design, Cambridge Printed in England by BiddIes Ltd., King's Lynn

Contents

Acknowledgements vii Introduction ix How to Use This Book xiv Illustrations between pages 142 and 143

Chapter A. 1914-1939

I

Chapter B. 1940-1949 54 Chapter C. 1950-1959 84 Chapter D. 1960-1975 114 Chapter E. 1976-2000

216

Timeline 344 Geographical Index 356 Subject Index 364 Name Index 368 Title Index 430

Acknowledgements

like to acknowledge his debt to R. J. Ellis, Geoffrey Soar, and Wolfgang Gortschacher for the invaluable help they have given over the years with this research into the history of UK little magazines. I would also like to thank the various poets, editors, scholars, and librarians who have given me advice or information, including Paul Buck, Anthony Rudolf, Keith Jebb, Maurice Scully, John Welch, Peter Philpott, Glyn Pursglove, Lee Harwood, Robert Sheppard, Stuart Mills, Nate Dorward, James Ferguson, Andreas Schachermayr, and Chris McCabe. Thanks also to my colleagues in the School of Arts, Communication and Culture at Nottingham Trent University, especially Lynne Hapgood, David Worrall, John Lucas, and Stan Smith, for their much appreciated support. Richard Price would like to thank the following at the British Library for helping in the making of this book: James Egles (formerly, Overseas English Collections), David White (Collection Development Support Unit), Duncan Heyes, Candida Ridler, and Andy Simons (Modern British Collections), Kristian Jensen (British and Early Printed Collections), Arthur Cunningham and Cynthia McKinley (formerly, Publishing), and all the library assistants who have patiently helped me retrieve thousands of little magazines over the years. I am especially grateful to the British Library for awarding me a three-month sabbatical, and to David Way (Publishing) for keeping faith with the book over so many years. I am also indebted to the following, either for information on their own involvement in little magazines, or for their knowledge of the little magazine world: Elizabeth James (Victoria and Albert Museum), Prof. A. T. Tolley, cris cheek, Gerry Loose, Ronald Senator, Peter Riley, Edwin Morgan, Simon Smith, um Freer, and William Allen.

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A V I D MIL L E R W 0 U L D

Introduction

1. DEFINITIONS

HE LITTLE MAGAZINE isnotdifficulttodefine:itis an anthology of work by strangers; an anthology of work by friends; an exhibition catalogue without the existence of the exhibition; a series of manifestos; a series of anti-manifestos ... It's printed by photo-litho; or typed onto a mimeograph stencil... It's a twenty-year sequence; or it turns out to be a one-off. Its history is as unproblematic. Certainly it is associated with artistic movements such as the Pre-Raphaelites, whose The Germ flourished briefly in the middle of the nineteenth century, or the Vorticists, whose Blast, first published in 1914, inaugurates the period of this book. But the chapbooks of songs, ballads, and tales sold in earlier centuries may claim ancestor status, as might manuscript copies of poems distributed among a select few. Though the little magazine is probably called "little" because of the comparatively low numbers made of any given issue, larger circulation literary journals published commercially have influenced the little magazine (and vice versa), and it can be difficult to say where a little magazine stops and a more commercial literary journal starts. It is also no~ easy to ascertain the circulation figures for either kind of publication. Faced with these definitional complexities, the compilers of an annotated bibliography and union catalogue of little magazines might best describe the little magazine in terms of individual characteristics, some of which need to be present in any given magazine to qualifY for its inclusion, and some of which, if not necessary to the definition, give a better sense of the rarer, "classic", little magazine. For the purposes of this book, with its specific focus on poetry, the little magazine can be very broadly defined as a publication that contains or concerns itself with poetry (which may mean an absence of poetry itself, if the prose or artwork has a strong connection to poetry)

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British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 and is intended to last more than one issue (although many little magazines are not successful in that ambition, and we have included some deliberate one-offs) and is published on a non-commercial basis (although we have included some magazines that aspired to commercial success and even some which appear to have achieved it) and has the explicit or implicit intention to assert its contents' difference, be it formally, regionally, ethnically or otherwise, from a poetry 'norm', 'centre', or 'establishment' (although we have also included magazines whose distance from a notional norm is difficult to measure). This last element elides identity politics with poetics; it is in poetics that the "classic" element of the little magazine is encountered. A classic little magazine, in the view of the present authors, publishes the work of a group of artists or writers who assert themselves as a group (e.g. the Surrealist Group of England's publication of The International Surrealist Bulletin in the mid Thirties) and/or work that is singular and independent of any specific group or movement and/or work that explicidy or implicidy asks to be measured in relation to the originality of its forms, either by offering the work as innovative, for example Kingdom Come's championing of the New Apocalyptic poets during the Second World War, or, on the contrary, by taking issue with the work of the formally novel and . asserting traditional forms instead (a stance taken by The Dark Horse, a magazine begun in 1995 and still extant) and/or work within notionally hybrid genres, such as And's visual poetry, Kroklok's sound poetry, or the prose poem and/or work deriving from and/or circulating to a small number of artists and writers (e.g. Robert Sheppard's Pages, published between 1987-1998, though later published on the Web), serving to [xl

Introduction maintain a kind of magazine-enabled community, keeping the individuals abreast of each other's work and providing other forms of friendly interchange, such as wider literary information

and/or work that suggests a self-conscious sense of the physical and graphic design of the magazine as being in tune with the content, be it the futurist-like cover to Irish modernist The Klaxon (1923) or the pre-Punk do-it-yourselfattitude of "bag mags", where different pages made by different authors are simply arranged in a bag (the last issue, in 1970, of The Black Country Meat Chronicle was in this form) and/or strong assertions - artistic, literary and political views - perhaps even to the point of exaggeration, unfairness, and even vituperation (Blast is perhaps the best example of this) and/or work that displays an engaged awareness of literary and artistic movements abroad, whether that be the American avant-garde in Peter Manson and Robin Purves's Object Permanence (1994-1997), or the translation of European authors in Lee Harwood's Soho (1964) and/or work that, simply, as time has gone by, has proven to be influential. 2. LITTLE MAGAZINES AS A RESOURCE FOR LITERARY HISTORY

A detailed history of the modern British little magazine has yet to be written, but it is hoped that this book and the key texts mentioned in the How To Use This Book chapter, cited throughout, form the building blocks with which to begin to construct such a history. But why are little magazines worthy of such treatment at all? One answer to this question is that work published in the little magazine is often that much closer to the original creative process than the version of the work that is later, in the process of being collected for a volume of poems, a novel, or book of essays, afforded more time for reflection and revision. Of course, it may not be collected in a later publication at all. Little magazines are the first place of publication for many authors later felt to be significant. As documented here, Norman McCaig's first poems appeared in the 1930S and 40s, but his wider [xi]

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 reputation would only be formed a decade or so later, by which time he had repudiated his earliest work. One of Basil Bunting's earliest appearances was as a reviewer of Conrad in the 1924 magazine The Transatlantic Review, but his rediscovery, and the publication of BriBafiatts, took place in the 1960s (in part associated with the rise of a flourishing little magazine scene). Perhaps because of the language-saturated qualities of poetry, and the dominance of poetry within little magazines, authors who begin their early careers with poems may go onto find a quite different literary form more suited to them. The playwright Harold Pinter and the novelist Ian Rankin, for example, each tried poetry before they had successes in the genre for which they would find renown. Little magazines are also a marker of milieu. For instance, a survey of literary taste for any particular period can be made by analysing who was or was not published where, a process which tests under the pressure of evidence later assertions and remembrances of movements and schools. If there was an Auden Generation, did the poets concerned tend to be published in particular places? If they did, were there poets who specifically weren't published in those magazines? Were there particular magazines for that grouping? And so on. Other literary trends can be looked at empirically via the little magazine, too. Translation, for instance. Translations which might never find book publication nevertheless may educate and inspire the little magazine readership (which is likely to contain a high proportion of writers, thus making a real impact on homegrown literatures). In looking at publication patterns the measure of engagement with a specific literary culture from overseas can be gauged, for instance the rise of East European translation in the latter half of the century. As our survey shows, the modern British little magazine has been both a landbridge and a landing strip for creative work from Europe and the Americas. These reasons, and no doubt many others of the kind, make the little magazine, as a key node in any literary infrastructure, worthy of collection and study. A library that houses and develops a little magazines collection is an immense resource for biographer and literary historian, allowing the exploration of not just the early thoughts, experiments, and impetuosities of particular authors but of broader literary trends and debate as well. The little magazine is not only of interest, however, as a seed nursery for emerging authors before they are transplanted into celebrity. Major writers, for instance, have found actually editing a [xii]

Introduction little magazine to be fundamental to their artistic practice for a significant part of their creative life, a pattern than can be seen in Wyndham Lewis, Hugh MacDiarmid, Laura Riding, Lee Harwood and Ian Hamilton Finlay. The literary magazine is, we would argue, a kind of artistic form in itsel£ The art of the editor is always a collaborative, commissioning but coercive art, like the art of a film director; like the exhibition curator, the editor has to decide what works will be presented, and what context will be provided in that presentation; the physical appearance of a magazine means that it has its own visual rules to play within or to subvert Perhaps the central importance oflittle magazines, however, is that they represent the ongoing, contemporary presentation and dissemination of the most innovative and exploratory writing of the day. Indeed, many significant writers continue to contribute to magazines long after they have become famous, finding this form of publication sympathetic to the experimental spirit of their art. James Joyce's continued publication in little magazines is one such case, with his final work, Finnegans Wake, appearing serially in transition. Readers and literary historians can also recover work that has been hitherto neglected but which, with the passage of time, emerges with renewed significance. Of course, very few little magazines achieve the greatness of the form at its best, but we hope that this book will be a first guide to the British little magazines that have tried.

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How to Use This Book

A. SCOPE 1.

Contemporary Poetry as the Focus

This is an annotated bibliography of poetry magazines published in the United Kingdom and the Republic ofIreland from 1914 to 2000.

Although the commentary and annotations are most concerned with the little magazines of our title, quite simply a magazine's publication of contemporary poetry, of whatever persuasion, is the prime criterion for inclusion. Like any major artistic genre, poetry contains complexities across and within its own sub-genres and the mode of publication inevitably reflects that. There is a blurring between what is, say, a cultural review, a general literary magazine, a region- or countrybased arts magazine, and a poetry magazine, even before the shades of difference between the publications within the "poetry magazine" category are considered. All may contain significant numbers of poems; all may influence the poetry climate of the day. What is, classically, a little magazine, is discussed in our Introduction, but the complexity of the poetry infrastructure has lead us not to offer a select listing of such titles (though this is an enterprise that is surely worth going on to do). Rather we have adopted a much broader selection where blurring within and outside the "poetry magazine" category is accepted as in the nature of poetry and its championing. Because our first interest lies in surveying the broad poetry landscape the overall bibliography is also broad. Because our second and greater interest is in magazines which published work that was either experimental or new to the British Isles, our annotations concern themselves most with the world of the classic little magazine. 2.

British and Irish Maaazines

This book's main focus is on magazines produced in England, Scotland and Wales. Magazines from Northern Ireland and the

How to Use This Book Republic of Ireland are also listed with annotated entries. Tom Clyde's Irish Literary Masazines; an Outline and Descriptive Bibliosraphy (Irish Academy Press, 2003) is the key work in this field and, to avoid unnecessary duplication and in deference to Clyde's expert knowledge, we have generally not annotated entries for Irish magazines to the same degree. Very occasionally we have included magazines from overseas which have important British content or appear to have been under British editorial control.

3.

1914-2000

The bibliography begins in the emblematically important year of 1914 - important as the start of the First World War, and as the year in which the first issue of Blast was produced - and finishes in the first year of the new millennium. The fleeting nature of poetry magazines and, in many cases, their only retrospective capture in research libraries means that the later period is likely to be less comprehensively documented than earlier years. The book is divided by periods which seem to us meaningful in terms of the history of the little magazine and which allow the dedicated poetry reader a reasonable chunk of time through which to browse. These are: 1914-39; 1940-49; 195 0-59; 1960-75; 1976-2000. The magazines are arranged alphabetically by title within these chapters, with each chapter being prefaced by our commentary on the trends of the period. We recognise the artificiality ofany periodisation, however, and so the Timeline provides a way through some of the highlights of the whole period, and the Geographical, Name, Subject and Title indexes should facilitate searches of various kinds across our designated periods. B. 1.

THE ANNOTATED ENTRIES

Basic Details and Indexes

Each entry records, where possible, the basic details of title, editor, place of publication, publisher, issue numbering and dates of publication. Titles are also found in the Title Index, editors in the Name Index, and place of publication is used in the Geographical Index. These indexes can be used not just to locate specifics but, by analysing them, to build up a picture of poetry magazine publication as a whole. The latter approach informs some of the comments in the introductory sections to each chapter. [xv]

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 The Subject Index provides access by poetry sub-genres, e.g. Sound Poetry, but also by literary movements, e.g. Surrealism, and social, political and other subjects which have been identified as a significant aspect of a magazine. 2.

Further Details

This book also records a number of other kinds of relevant information, including: a "Note" (for title changes and other bibliographic information); "Index" (the details of any publication that indexes the magazine); the details of any "Anthology" of the writers associated with the magazine; the details of a relevant "Interview" with an editor; any "Study" of the magazine; any associated "Website"; and any "Reprint". Of particular interest is the "Related Imprint" information, in which an associated press and examples of that press's publications are noted. Poetry magazines often work within a broader publishing infrastructure and we have tried to show this here. Many of the entries have an additional commentary in which we have attempted to draw out some of the character of the magazine (with particular topics indexed in the Subject Index), or at least mention key, interesting, and characteristic contributors. Contributors are in turn indexed in the Name Index which can be used to build up a sense of a particular author's range of publication. As noted above, our emphasis in the annotations has been on the quintessential little magazine, so that more conventional (and well-known) magazines do not generally receive as much critical attention even though we have sought to include them. This book is intended to be a starting point for further study of particular magazines, as well as surveying the wider magazine infrastructure. To this end, each entry refers the reader to any identified existing commentary about a publication, such as those found in earlier directories or books on the subject. Where a magazine has been described in some detail in another reference work, this is recorded in the "Profiled in" information. In the "Index" and "Profiled in" fields certain key texts, which we regard as essential tools for researchers of poetry's contexts and the little magazine, are abbreviated as set out in the Abbreviations section below.

3. Holdings in Libraries This book is not only an annotated bibliography but a union catalogue of holdings as well. For each entry, we have consulted the catalogues of the British Library, Cambridge University Library, [xvi]

How to Use This Book the National Library of Scotland, Trinity College Dublin and University College London's Little Magazines and Small Press Collection. The Poetry Library, although not so strong in its holdings for the first half of the century, is an extremely rich resource for later magazines: in many cases, equal to or better than the national and academic libraries. Its holdings are placed beneath the list of libraries with a century-long breadth. Each of these libraries has an abbreviation, set out in the Abbreviations section below. Where any of these libraries is not listed in the entry it means that we have not been able to locate holdings in that library for the particular magazine. Where appropriate, the shelfmark of the particular library's holdings is also given. Where there is a shelfmark on its own, without a holdings statement, it can be assumed that the Library has the whole run. In the case of University College London and the Poetry Library, whose alphabetical-by-title shelfmarks are not used in this book, we have indicated that the Library has the complete run of the magazine by simply using the Library's abbreviation on its own. Where a magazine is not well-represented by our core libraries the holdings of a further library that does have the magazine are noted. Such libraries are not given an abbreviation but spelt out in full. Some magazines are known to have existed but have not been located. These are nevertheless recorded here.

4. Abbreviations The following abbreviations are used for key libraries and key reference works:

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British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 BL Bloomfield CUL Gortschacher 1 Gortschacher 2 Hayes Hoffman, Allen and Ulrich

NLS Sader Stanton

TCD Tolley 1930S Tolley 1940S UCL UK Little Magazines Project

British Library B. C. Bloomfield, An Author Index to Selected British 'Little Magazines' 1930-1939.(London: Mansell, 197 6) Cambridge University Library Wolfgang Gortschacher, Little Magazine Projiles: The Little Magazines in Great Britain, 1939-1993. (Salzburg: University of Salzburg, 1993) Wolfgang Gortschacher, Contemporary Views on the Little Magazine Scene. (Salzburg: Poetry Salzburg, 2000) Richard T. Hayes (ed.) Sourcesfor the history ofIrish civilisation. Articles in Irish periodicals. (Boston: G. K. Hall, 1970) Frederick T. Hoffman, Charles Allen and Carolyn F. Ulrich, The Little Magazine: A History and a Bibliography. 2nd ed. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1947) National Library of Scotland Marion Sader (ed.), Comprehensive Index to English Language Little Magazines, 1890-197°. Series 1 (Millwood, N.Y.: Kraus-Thomson, 1976) Michael N. Stanton, English Literary Journals, 19°0-1950: A Guide to Information Sources. (Detroit: Gale Research, 1982) Alvin Sullivan (ed.), British Literary Magazines: The Modern Age, 1914-1984. (London: Greenwood, 1986) Trinity College Dublin A. T. Tolley, The Poetry of the Thirties. (London: Gollancz, 1975) A. T. Tolley, The Poetry of the Forties. (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1985) University College London Little Magazines, Alternative Press and Poetry Store The Little Magazines Project, Nottingham Trent University. Research team: David Miller, David Worrall, John Lucas, and Stan Smith (and formerly R.. T. Ellis). Web: www2.ntu.ac.uk/littlemagazines/

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Chapter A: 1914-1939 From Blast to Kingdom Come

HE FIRST ISS U E of Wyndham Lewis's Blast, a large pink slab of sans serif shrieks and shouts, was published in June 1914, two months before the start of the First World War. Its second issue, which did not appear for another year, was its last. The excitement of mechanised violence on an industrial scale that had characterised the 1914 issue had by then given way to a more subdued and ambiguous tone. The English Vorticist artists associated with the magazine differed from their Italian Futurist counterparts in coming to express doubt rather than exhilaration in their approach to the dehumanisation of the modern world. Although Blast's appearance in 1914 in a sense inaugurates the chosen period of this volume and chapter, its example should not be seen in isolation. The recent lineage of classic British little magazines can be traced back through various magazines to the The Germ (1850), disseminator of Pre-Raphaelite ideas. More significantly, Blast had been immediately pre-dated by a number of magazines which reviewed, contextualised and speculated on new movements in literature and art. These included John Middleton Murry's Rhythm (19II-1913) and longer-running magazines which would continue beyond Blast's short life, such as A. R. Orage's The New ABe and Ford Madox Hueffer's The English Review. The Times Literary Supplement, no little magazine and to be much vilified by various avant-gardes over the corning century, had only recently been founded and was reviewing books, however its detractors might object, across a large subject range. The Poetry Review under Harold Monro from 1912 to 1913 had only recently been a publisher of modern and modernist verse, too. Blast is therefore a beginning in the history of the modern little magazine but only one beginning. Understandably, less confrontational magazines lasted longer. In the 1920S T. S. Eliot's The Criterion built on their example, further encouraging receptivity to modernist modes. Closer to the agitprop tactics of Blast, however, was the first of the Imagist anthologies Des Imagistes. These collections are included as a kind

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British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 of little magazine on the grounds of their frequency, their presentation ofa named group (including the poets Richard Aldington, H. D., Amy Lowell, John Gould Fletcher, Pound himself and others), and the campaigning nature of the Imagist 'project'. The Imagists were not the only grouping of the day, however. The Georgian poets, such as Rupert Brooke and John Drinkwater, were represented in Lascelle Abercrombie's New Numbers which lasted for four issues in 1914, building on Vivian Locke Ellis's magazine Open Window (1910-11), Middleton Murry's Rhythm and James Guthrie's Root and Branch (1912-1919). Despite being pilloried later for their weak prosody, their ruralism and general stylistic backwardness the Georgians had begun, tentatively, to modernise the diction of English poetry while building a substantial readership. Even Edward Thomas's poems, written in the last two years of his life and published largely posthumously following his death on the Front, found some little magazine publication before he died (in Austin O. Spare's Form, where "Lob" was first published in 1916). His poems can also be seen within the context of the infrastructure serving the Georgian poetry whose qualities they rapidly exceeded. The Imagists, with a considerable American contingent, were championed by the irrepressible Ezra Pound who followed the Georgians in compiling successive group anthologies to spread the word. Magazines with Pound as a regular contributor such as The New Age and The Egoist, edited by Dora Marsden and Harriet Shaw Weaver, supported the Imagists, too. Indeed, in the same way that Blast can be said to have adopted some of the rhetorical tactics of the badges, fliers and posters of the Suffrage movement without the focussed political direction, it may be that Pound's involvement in The Egoist, once a feminist magazine, The New Freewoman, was a literary (and male) occupation of what had been, until his intervention, a more clearly radical feminist journal. Harold Monro at the Poetry Bookshop, publisher of Poetry and Drama and The Monthly Chapbook, was typically even-handed and published both movements, albeit issuing the Georgian anthologies under the Poetry Bookshop imprint. Perhaps Blast's aesthetic and rhetorical aggression when compared with the real bloodbath of the First World War damaged the example of creative possibilities there are within the little magazine when taken as an artform in itself. Over the century very few British magazines concerned with art or literature would combine all that made Blast a classic little magazine, from its proselytising of a small group of avant-garde writers and artists to the matching of its typography and graphic design with its editorial

Chapter A: 1914-1939 perspective. Understandably, Wilfred Owen, recovering in 19I7 from shell shock in the Craiglockhart War Hospital on the outskirts of Edinburgh, would use his editorship of the hospital magazine The Hydra for his mental recuperation and the development of his own poetry rather than for any artistic 'explosion'. The stakes were privately and nationally higher now, a tragic state of affairs underlined by another literary magazine, Edith Sitwell's Wheels, which published Owen's posthumous poetry just two years later. The First World War's effect on poetry in England can be seen in Owen's angry example (and in the artful plain-speaking of Edward Thomas) but in Scotland and, especially, in Ireland, the effects were more directly political. Ireland's little magazine heyday was arguably at the turn of the century with W. B. Yeats's drama-focused magazines Beltaine (1899-1900), Samhain (19011908) and The Arrow (1906), and the anonymously edited Dana (19 0 4-19 0 5). The War's catalytic effect on Ireland meant that several of the contributors to the otherwise unassuming The Irish Review would later lose their lives in the Easter Rising and its vicious aftermath. That The Irish Review published the manifesto of the Irish Volunteers in June 1914, the same month that Blast was first issued, again contrasts political urgency with artistic rhetoric. Once unshackled from Britain, to a degree, Ireland in the 1920S and 30S when seen through the lens of the literary magazine is a country where immense (if sometimes emigrant) creative forces are faced and faced off by a sensitive and censoring emergent state. Successive titles, The Irish Statesman, The Klaxon, To-morrow, and Ireland To-day were closed as moral and religious sensibilities were offended again and again by explicit modernist experiments. In Scotland, C. M. Grieve ("Hugh MacDiarmid"), a young war veteran and contributor to The New Age, used his various little magazines as well as his analytical contributions to the Scottish Educational Journal (out of scope for this volume) to urge a radicalisation of Scottish culture and politics and to assemble and encourage the writers of "the Scottish Renaissance". The work of his many but shortlived 1920S publications, Northern Numbers, The Scottish Chapbook, The Northern Review and The Scottish Nation, publishing and discussing authors such as Lewis Grassic Gibbon, Neil Gunn, Edwin and Willa Muir and William Soutar with an internationalist sensibility, was consolidated by James H. Whyte's The Modem Scot from 1930. Other journals such as The Free Man, Outlook, The New Alliance and the popular Scots MaBazine (again, out of scope

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 for this bibliography) began to re-establish a distinct literary culture within Scotland. Wales's literary revival, Dylan Thomas notwithstanding, would be more associated with the coming of the Second World War rather than the aftermath of the First, kickstarted by Kiedrych Rhys's Wales (First Series, 1937-1940) and Gwyn Jones's The Welsh Review (1939-1948). By the 1930S the broadly left political complexion of the literary journals contrasted with the right-wing and centrist politics of the successive Governments actually in power. Orage's enthusiasm for the Social Credit ideas ofC. H. Douglas, particularly when seen as a blueprint for postwar rejuvenation, was articulated in The New ABe and then in Orage's later journal, The New EnBlish Weekly (19321949). The latter may be better known for being the first publisher of three of Eliot's Four Quartets but Eliot and the other authors being published there, including Dylan Thomas, Hugh MacDiarmid, William Carlos Williams, David Gascoyne and Basil Bunting, were appearing in a publication primarily devoted to rather theoretical political ideas. Purpose (1929-1940) was another Social Credit magazine with a literary dimension, publishing poetry by Dylan Thomas and Lawrence Durrell and literary essays by Henry Miller, W. H. Auden and, again, T. S. Eliot. Douglas's own magazine The FiB Tree, subtitled "a Douglas Social Credit quarterly review" (First series, 1936-1939) published Eric Gill, Stella Gibbons, Ruth Pitter, and, almost inevitably, the prolific interjector Ezra Pound. Little magazines of a more socialist sympathy were also part of the literary scene. Almost all were London-based though CambridBe LIjt (First Series, 1933-1934) suggests that university life could have an influence on political preference. This suggestion is confirmed by those later identified as communist spies, such as Anthony Blunt and Donald Maclean, who appeared in several of the magazines of the day. Though their own work may be closer to the preoccupations of the private school than the aspirations of the public library, the Oxbridge poets of the "Auden generation" Auden, Stephen Spender, Cecil Day Lewis and Louis MacNeice also identified themselves with leftist causes. Their poetry was published in many magazines but is especially associated with Geoffrey Grigson's broadly left-leaning New Verse (1933-1939). Sylvia Pankhurt's Germinal (1923)-[1924] was a literary offshoot of her The Workers' DreadnouBht newspaper, published in the East End by the Workers's Suffrage Federation. The appearance of Soviet authors Aleksandr Blok and Anna Akmatova is likely to have been a political as well as a literary decision, although that is not to say they would have been the natural choice of the Soviet authorities of

Chapter A: I9I4-I939 the day. The Bermondsey Book (I923-I930) edited from Ethel Gutman's bookshop was similarly internationalist with Luigi Pirandello and Edna St. Vincent Millay, for example, among its contributors. Bookshops were clearly important cultural nodes for publication and events, not just for bookselling. The Poetry Bookshop in central London was an outstanding example of this, not only publishing The Monthly Chapbook, other little magazines and volumes of poetry but organising regular readings and even offering accommodation for visiting poets. The Modern Scot was similarly attempting to build and sell through a cultural infrastructure its editor, the American James H. Whyte, was also trying to build: the magazine was published in conjunction with his art gallery and bookshop. In England, The Lift Review was published at Collett's Bookshop and the 'virtual' bookshop of the Left Book Club produced its own poetry serial Poetry and the People. As mentioned above, The Bermondsey Book relied on its bookshop association, too. One of the most interesting magazines of the period, Jon Randell Evans's The Twentieth Century (I93I-33) was the voice ofThe Promethean Society, a group that believed in scientific responses to social issues. Anti-monarchy, pro birth control, liberal towards homosexuality and libertarian in its outlook on censorship, the Society would have found no favour within any of the political orthodoxies of the day, and few now. It attracted Auden, Lewis Grassic Gibbon (writing under his real name, J. Leslie Mitchell), Naomi Mitchison and George Barker to its pages. In I933 it published the supplement "Twentieth Century Verse" with an essay by Henry Porteus recognising, early in his career, the quality of Auden's poetry. Britain viewed through its literary magazines was far from the parochial backwater it is sometimes misremembered as being. The openness of British literary magazines to American modernist authors and indeed the editorial control by U. S. editors has already been demonstrated in the discussion above, to which the presence of Ford Madox Ford's intercontinental The Transatlantic Review (I924) can be added. Russian and European modernism was actively encouraged in Sidney Hunt's Ray (I927) where visual and sound poetry and the visual arts in general were particularly strong. Ray published no less than Hans Arp, I. K. Bonset (i.e. Theo van Doesburg), Giorgio de Chirico, Otto Dix, Wassily Kandinsky, EI Lissitzky, Kasimir Malevich, Laszlo Moholy-Nagy, Ben Nicholson, Kurt Schwitters and Mies van der Rohe. Edwin

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 Muir and Janko Lavrin published many translations of central and eastern European authors in their The European Quarterly (1934-1935). Reluctance to enjoy all things French may be an English stereotype but the evidence suggests the contrary. Surrealism in particular was encouraged by journals such as Roger Roughton's Contemporary Poetry and Prose (1936-1937) which published texts by Rene Char, Andre Breton and Paul Eluard as well as Rene Magritte, Luis Bunuel and Salvador Dali. E. L. T. Mesens's London Gallery Bulletin published the Surrealists, too; a complete set of the Bulletin was owned by Breton himself. Another myth regarding the English character, its determination to avoid discussing politics, was punctured by the English Surrealists. In 1936 the Surrealist Group of England published no. 4 ofThe International Surrealist Bulletin and issued their Declaration on Spain demanding that the British Government stopped supporting the anti-democratic nationalists in Spain. The leftist tenor of several poetry magazines in the 1930S also suggests that the English are not necessarily the apolitical people they have been characterised as. In a similar way there were a number of groups of artists and writers who allowed themselves to be seen as a movement of a kind and asserted themselves as such through the little magazine. History may not recall the Promethean Society, the Emotionists or the Islanders particularly well but that there were these groups alongside the better known Vorticists suggests that intellectualised, self-conscious movements are not as foreign to Britain as may at first be thought. One group, the New Apocalypse poets, were promulgated through Seven (1938-1947) and Kinadom Come (1939-1943). Taking their bearings to some extent from Dylan Thomas and from Surrealism, this grouping was composed of poets such as W. S. Graham, Norman MacCaig, Tom Scott, Nicholas Moore, Vernon Watkins, Robert Greacen, and Henry Treece whose work would find greater exposure during the Second World War, to the extent that the group tends to be seen as a 1940S school. Organisations devoted to the appreciation of both writing and reading poetry were part of the period between the wars and are glimpsed through the magazines they published. Perhaps some operated rather like the workshops of later years. At a local level these included the Belfast Writers' Club, The Bristol Poets' Fellowship, The Calder Valley Poets' Society, The Glasgow Literary Club and the Oxford English Club. The Poetry Society emerged from an actually very busy field of aspirationally national organi-

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Chapter A: 1914-1939 sations including The Academy of Poetry, The British Association of Literary Amateurs, The Empire Poetry League, The International Institute of British Poetry, The National Poetry Circle, and The Verse Speaking Fellowship. This variety of voices should not, however, be taken to indicate an even spread of publication across the country. One stereotype about British publishing is borne out by the magazines in this period: the publication of literary magazines in Britian and Ireland was dominated by London. II7 titles published in London are recorded in our survey, about a half of all magazines. Dublin was next with 17 titles, appearing to have produced slightly more than either sleepy Oxford or Cambridge in this period (fourteen titles each) but, calculated on number of new titles, all three publishing centres were operating at less than 15% of the output of the English capital. Edinburgh, arguably a publishing giant in the nineteenth century, could not muster 10% of London's output in the 1914-1939 period. In fact, the most culturally significant Scottish magazines were issued from towns in the regions, Montrose for The Scottish Chapbook and The Scottish Nation, Dundee for The Modern Scot or not in Scotland at all, such as Edwin Muir's Londonpublished The European Quarterly. Northern Ireland appears to have punched above its demographic weight with six new titles from Belfast in this period, while Wales almost failed to muster a punch at all: we found that more new titles were published in Belfast than in the whole of Wales. Qualitatively, though, perhaps only The Northman (1926-50) from Queen's University had high literary ambitions and these only during the 1940S when John Gallen and Robert Greacen were editors. It is also the case that literary magazines are not the only measure of cultural change: the founding of the Gregynog Press in 1923, the birth of Plaid Cymru in 1925, the nationalist arson at the British Bombing School at Penyberth in 1936, and of course Dylan Thomas's British success, suggest that Wales was in fact very much changing at both a cultural and a political level during this period. The literary magazines which began towards the end of the 1930s, Wales and The Welsh Review, can therefore be seen as emerging from a culture which had already begun to reconfigure itself in relation to its neighbour but which may have required these magazines to begin the process of Wales addressing itself.

1 The Abinger Chronicle I [edited by Sylvia Sprigge]. Abinger Common: rrhe Abinger Chronicle], Vol. 1 no. 1 (Christmas I939)-vol. 5 no. I (Sept. 1944) Index: Bloomfield (Vol. 1 no. 1 (Christmas 1939) only) Profiled in: Hoffinan, Allen & Ulrich, Sullivan 1914-1984 Abs: A magazine publishing a core of work from residents living in or near the Surrey village ofAbinger Common. Poets included R. C. Trevelyan, Nicholas Moore, John Griffin, E. M. Skipper, Denton Welch, Ida Procter, Sruart Piggott, Sylvia Sprigge, E. D. Idle, Peggy Whitehouse, Nicolai Gumilev, Clare Cameron, Ursula Wood, Sylvia Lynd, Geoffrey Eley, and others. More well-known contributors - of prose - included E. M. Forster, Ralph Vaughan Williams and Max Beerbohm. A 'Supplement to the Abin9a Chroniclt' was published as Tht Abin9n Garland: Poems [by] Nicolai Gumilev, translated by Yakov Hornstein (Dorking: A. A. Tanner & Son, 1945) BL: PP. 6036.dd.{1.) BL: P.P.6036.dd

1 The Adelphi I edited by John Middleton Murry; Max Plowman; Richard Rees; Henry Williamson; George Godwin; B. Ifor Evans_ London: rrhe Adelphi], 1913-1955 Note: Imprint and editors vary. Vol. 1 (June 1913)-Yol. 4 (June 1917) were published as Tht Adtlphi. Vol. I. no. 1 (Sept 1917)-vol. 3· no. 4. (Aug 1930) were published as Tht Ntw Adtlphi. A new series, Vol. I. no. 1 (Oct 1930)-Yol. 31. no. 4. (Third Quarter 1955) reverted to the original title. index: Each volume carries its own index. Profiled in: Hoffman, Allen & Ulrich; Stanton; Sullivan 1914-1984; Jason Harding, "Tht Adtlphi: the reaction against Romanticism", in Tht Critmon: cultural politics and pmodical nrtworlcs in intn-war Britain (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1001), PP.1S-43, BL: YC.1001.a.7IS9 Related Work: John Gregory (ed.), Words on tht WISt Wind: stltcttd tsSCIysfrom The Adelphi, 1924-1950, [Longstanton]: [Henry Williamson Sociery], [2000]

Ageneral literary review but with a particular interest, in the first decade or so, in the writings ofO. H. Lawrence and Katherine Mansfield. It published many of the poets of ' the Auden Generation', but favoured Iiterarure which was plain speaking and was generally against the experimenraJ and modernist BL: P.P.5939.beb. CUL: QgOO.C.114 NLS: Y.188 TCD: Vol.r no.l-Yol. 1 no. 4 (1923). (PER 80-852). New series, Vol. 4 no. 1 (May 1932) only. (OLS L-;7-146 nO·3); Vol. 16 no. 4 (19S0)-vol. 29 no. 4 (1953). (E.Artic.V.) UCL: Vol. 13 no. 3 (1947). (L Housman Coli)

3 The Adelphi Magazine I edited by Henry Danielson. London: rrhe Adelphi Magazine], NO.1 (June 1911) Profiled in: Hoffinan, Allen & Ulrich Fiction, with just a few poems. Not related to the magazine of similar title. BL: P.P.S939.bgd. CUL: L727.B.31 NLS: 5-380 TCD: 166.n.33.no.6

4 Aengus: an all poetry journal I edited by H. O. White, then Francis Stuart. Dublin: Wood Printing Works [Printer], Midsummer I9I9-Juiy 1920 Index: Rudi Holzapfel, Author Indtx 3 (Blackrock: Carraig Books, 1985) Profiled in: Hoffman, Allen & Ulrich; Tom Clyde,lrish Litnary Ma9alintS: an outlint and dtScriptiut bibliography (Dublin: Irish Academic Press,1003), BL: 1725.g.3414 A poetry-only magaaine in which it was intended that eight writers each produced in rum one issue of the journal. The eight were: Richard Rowley, Anna G. Keown, H. [Le. Francis] Sruart, B. R. Dodds, C. O'leary, H. O. White, D. L. Kelleher, and F. R. Higgins.

Chapter A: 1914-1939 Quarter, 1922) (T727.A.6) NLS: Vol. I no. I (First Quarter, 1920) - vol. 2 no. 2 (Second Quarter, 1922) (Q.92.) TCO: Vol. I only. (24.dd.8) UCL

TCD: 99.d.207 National Library ofIreland: IR 8205 A I Alba Nuadh See The Free Man A77

5 Albannach: a little anthology of 1938 Scots poetry I edited byC. J. Russell

8 Arena I edited by Martin Turnell. London: Sands & Co, Vol. 1 no. 1 (April 1937)-no. 4 (193 8)

and J. F. Hendry. Dingwall: C. J. Russell, 1938 Index: A list of contributors is given in the entry for

Albannach in the Scottish Poetry Library catalogue, www.spl.org.uk.

Index: Bloomfield

Contibutors include writers of the Scottish Renaissance, such as Hugh MacDiarmid. Norman MacCaig, William Soutar, Robert Garioch and others.

In the first issue this describes its intention to be a '[Roman] Catholic general quarterly review'. It published almost no poems, though four by J. Uhl appear in the last issue. It did, however, have some articles on poetry: "A Note on Alfred Noyes" by D. A. Traversi in vol. I no. 2 (July 1937); "Marxism and English Poetry" by D. A. Traversi, and "Surrealism" by Martin Turnell, both appeared in Vol I no. 3 (Oct-Dec 1937)· BL: P.P.5939.cal. CUL: Qgoo.C.205 NLS: U.448 TCO: 96.0.141

BL: II455.1. 30 . CUL: 1991.8.148 NLS: HP2.80.3945; Second copy: 1939. 17 TCD: OLS L-6--994 nO.18 Copy B; Second copy: PAM POEMS 44.14 Scottish Poetry Library

6 The Anglo-Norman Review I edited by A. C. Voisin. Jersey: British Association of Literary Amateurs and the Anglo-Norman Literary Circle, April 1929. New Series, No. I (Oct. 1929)-3 (Dec. 1929)

9 Art and Letters I edited by Frank Rutter, Charles Ginner, and H. Gilman. London: Art and Letters, Vol. I no. 1 (July 19I7)-vol. 3 no. 2 (Winter 1920)

The local articles, short fiction and very occasional poems of this magazine did not live up to the promise of the sub· title of the first typewritten issue, "The Most Interesting Magazine Ever Published in the Channel Islands". The tone is generally jovial and without ambition. Membership of the Anglo-Norman Literary Circle was bundled with a subscription to this magazine and to the British Association of Literary Amateurs' The Literary Amatrur. BL: P.P.6072

Profiled in: Hoffinan, Allen & Ulrich; Stanton; Sullivan 19 14-1 984 Reprint: London: Frank Cass, 1970. 2 vols. BL: P.901/687 Eliot contributed essays on drama. Poetry included work by Wilfred Owen, Siegfried Sassoon, and Isaac Rosenberg, as well as Edith Sitwell, Richard A1dington, Herbert Read, and T. S. Eliot. Ezra Pound was also a contributor.

I edited by Herbert Furst. London: Colour

BL: P.P.193r.ig. CUL: L727.B.28 NLS: U.391 TCO: 73.ee.52

Publishing Company, Vol. 1 no. 1 (1920)-[vol. 3 no. 1] (1922)

10

7

The Apple - of Beauty and Discord

Artwork: an illustrated quarterly of arts & crafts I edited by Herbert

Profiled in: Hoffinan, Allen & Ulrich; Stanton Reprint: Nendeln, Liechtenstein: Kraus Reprint, 1973

Wauthier. London: The Artwork Publishing Company, Vol. 1 no. 1 (1924)-vol. 7 no. 28 (193 1)

Concerned with literature and art. Contributors included John Radker, Robert Graves, and Osbert Sitwell. Critical contributions by Ezra Pound, T. Sturge Moore, and others. BL: Vol. I no. I (First Quarter, 1920) - vol. 2 no. 2 (Second

Note: Sometimes cited as Art Work. Though dedicated to modern arts and crafts, Artwork very occasionally included some art theory by those also associated with literature, notably Wyndham Lewis on "The

Quarter, 1922) (P.P.193I.qab.) CUL: Vol. 1 no. I (First Quarter, 1920) - vol. 2 no.

2

(Second

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British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 Queen's University Belfast: hAPn.B3

politics of artistic expression" (vol. 1 no. 4, May-Aug. 1925). Contributors included the artists Eric Gill and William McCance.

The Bermondsey Book: a quarterly review of life & literature. London: Cecil

13

BL: P.P.17II.dbb. CUL: 4°o.B.16 NLS:Y.185

Palmer, then Heinemann, Vol. 1 no. I (Dec 1923)-vol. 7 no. 2. (March/May 1930)

The Autumn Anthology See The Mitre Anthology of Poetry AI24

Axis: a quarterly review of contemporary 'abstract' painting and sculpture / edited by Myfanwy Evans.

II

London: [Axis], I (1937)-8 (1937) Index: Bloomfield Profiled in: Hoffinan, Allen & Ulrich Reprint: New York: Arno, 1968 essays from contributors such as Herbert Read, Jean Helion, John Piper, S. John Woods, and Geoffrey Grigson. llIustrations were usually in black and white, but there are some colour lithographs. Although about art, this can be seen as a complementary journal to some ofthe little magazines interested in surrealist writing, such as Contemporary Pottry and Prost.

The Black Hat: An Unusual Review / edited by D. Thompson and H.

14

Kelly. London: [The Black Hat], Vol. I no. I (Sept. 1930)-no. 8 (Oct. 1932)

BL: PP.1931.pdb CUL: 4°o.B.45 NLS:5· 890 TCD: 99.C.1I3 UCL:3 0nly

BL: Newspaper Collections

IS Blast: review of the great English vortex / edited by Wyndham Lewis. London:

Banba / [edited by Eamon O'Duibhir?] Dublin: Gael Co-operative Society, Vol. I no. I(May 192I)-voI. 3 no. 3 (Aug. 1922)

John Lane, The Bodley Head, I (June 20 1914)-2 (July I9IS)

12

Note: Mostly in English, but includes some work in Irish Index: Index to Vol. 1 only, issued with last issue of that volume Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish LittTary Magazines: an outlinr and descriptiw bibliography (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2003), BL: 2725.g.3414

BL: P.P.6158.gb TCD: 35.bb.45, 4 6 National Library ofIreiand: IR 05 b 1

A general review of the Left, with its editorial office at Ethel Gutman's Bermondsey Bookshop. A very eclectic magazine, with contributors including Luigi Pirandello, George Bernard Shaw, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Thomas Hardy, Aldous Huxley and Walter de la Mare. BL: P.P.5938.bam. CUL: L727.C.1 NLS:Q.no TCD: PER 91-200

A handsome showcase for modern European art, with

Short stories and articles about Irish culture and history. Increasingly less poetry as the magazine goes on. The poems tend to owe something to Yeats in his 'Innisfree' period. Contributors include F. R. Higgins and Daniel Corkery.

Index: Bloomfield (Vol 7 no 2 (March/April/May 1930) only) Profiled in: Hoffman, Allen & Ulrich, Stanton, Sullivan 1914-1984 Anthology: Sidney Gutman (compiler), Stvm Yran' Harwst. An anthology oftht Bmnondsty Book,1923-1930 (London: William Heinemann, 1934), BL: 12356.r.l.

Index: Sader Profiled in: Stanton; Sullivan 1914-1984 Study: Paul Edwards (cd.), Blast: Vorticism 1914-1918 (Alders hot: Ashgate, 2000), BL: YC.2000.b.1882 Related Work: Seamus Cooney (ed.), Blast 3 (Santa Barbara, CA: Black Sparrow Press, 1984). A compendium in honour of Wyndham Lewis. BL: CDM.1997.b.664 Reprint: Blast: TwitW ofthr grtat English IIOrta. Foreword by Bradford Morrow (Santa Barbara: Black Sparrow Press, 198I) Blast published "Vorticist" poetry, prose, manifestos, and art. Heavily influenced by Italian Futurism, it was typographically innovative, using sans serif styles of differing sizes for its Marinetti-poster-Iike "blasts" and "blesses", which are poems of a kind. Its bright pink covers must also have been calculated to raise an eyebrow.

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Chapter A: 1914-1939 Contributors include Ezra Pound, T. S. Eliot and others. BL: CUP.410.g.186 CUL: Q727.B.6 NLS:Q·55 TCD: OLS X-2-126 nO.I, 2

16 Bolero: a magazine of poetry. Oxford: Andrew Murray, No. I (Summer 1938)-3 (Spring 1939) Note: Absorbed by Kingdom Comt in Spring 1940 Index: Bloomfield Profiled in: Hoffman, Allen & Ulrich Little magazine associated with the Mass Observation movement. BL: P.P.5I26.bm. CUL: L727.C.I03 NLS: 1942.23 TCD: No. 2-3. (133·n.UI.no.I,2)

17 A... Book of Poems by the Poet's Fellowship. Bristol: [First Book, 1920]Third Book (1922) BL: First Book: ou604.ff.15.; Second Book: 0I1604·ff.17·; Third Book: u644·d.6r. NLS: Second and Third Book only: 1963.100

18 The Booster: a monthly in French and English I edited by Alfred Perles. Paris: [The Booster], Vol. 2 no. 7 (Sept. 1937)-nos.l-9 (1959). (P.P.5u6.fab). 21; 22; 27-32. (P·901/3I8I) CUL: 15 (I97d-? (L727.B.158) NLS: Lacking: 26; 29; 35; 40. (HP.med.355 PER) UCL:4-S0. Poetry Libra!}': I; 20; 22-24; 28-30; 32-34; 36-s0

74 Oxford Left / edited by Stanley Mitchell, then Phyllis Kline, Gabriel Pearson and Ralph Samuel. Oxford: Oxford University Socialist Club, [1953?]-[195-]. Then, [New series], No. [I] (Michaelmas 1965)-9 (1969) As it suggests, a socialist student magazine. Poetry and

articles on poetry were published, however, and contributors included: Geoffrey Richman, Anthony Thwaite, Jim Fitton, Gabriel Pearson, A. N. Kaul, and Adrian Mitchell. The latter also contributed an article on "Poetry and Society" and Gabriel Pearson contributed a response to it in the same issue (Michaelmas 1954). The New Series was published under the auspices of the renamed Oxford University Socialist Group and was much more of a politics-focused magazine. BL: Michaelmas [ie Autumn] 1953, Hila!}' [i.e. Spring] 1954, Michaelmas 1954. (ZA.9.a.666x). New Series, [1]-4. (P·7 oX /48) London School of Economics: New Series, [x]-6. (Main collection, HX3); also, New Series, 2-g. (Reserve Periodicals, LB36xo)

Oxford Opinion: art, literature, music, poems, philosophy, politics, travel/ edited by Ian Downing; and others.

75

Oxford: [Oxford Opinion], [Vol. I. no. I, 1955-no . 46,1961]. New Series, No. I [Autumn 1965]-4 [Summer 1966] Note: Volume numbering ceases after vol. 4 no. II (Mar. X9 60), the next issue being no. 38 (30th Apr. 1960); no. 45 was a joint issue with Granta BL: [Vol. I] no. 4 (25 Oct. X956)-vol. 3 no. 6 (22 Nov. 195 8)-no. 45. New Series, No. 1-4. (P.P.6II8.ke) CUL: Vol. 4 nO.4-vol. 4 no. II; no. 3!H46]. (Lg85.B.93) NLS: Vol. 4 nO.4-no. 44. (6.II86)

7 6 Pawn / edited by John Blackwood; Charles Harrison; Christopher Dougherty, Clive Wilmer; Leslie Bell and Robert Wells; Kevin Stratford and Charles Nicholl. Cambridge: [Pawn, c/o King's College], No.1 (1956)-39 (197 2 ) Note: Several issues are unnumbered "

Poems, often by those who went on to be berter known in other fields, e.g. Angus Calder, Jenni Daiches, Alexis Lykiard, Howard Brenton, Clive Wilmer, Tell}' Eagleton, Clive James, Richard Burns, Simon Jervis, and others.

Chapter C: 1950-1959 Sl: 17 (Nov. 1960), March 1961, 21 (Mar. 1962), Michaelmas 1962, Easter 1963,28 (May 1965),33 (Lent 1967), 36 (Summer 1969). (ZA.9.a.4737) CUl: CAM.C.72.28 UCl

77 PEN in Exile / edited by T. Zavalani. London: P.E.N. Centre for Writers in Exile, No. 1 [1954?]-27/28 (October 1960) Note: Related to Arma (1961-1967): produced by the same organisation and probably Arma's predecessor Anthology: P. Tabori (ed.) Tht Pm in Exile (London: International P.E.N. Club Centre for Writers in Exile, 1954), Sl: 12299.ee.33; and P. Tabori (ed.) Tht Pm in Exilt: a second anthology (International P.E.N. Club Centre for Writers in Exile, 19S6), Sl: 12300.CC.17 Sl: 25-27/28. (PP.761 5.ir)

78 Perspectives / edited by James Laughlin, then Lionel Trilling, then Jacques Barzan, then Malcolm Cowley, then R. P. Blackmur, etc. London: Hamish Hamilton, NO.1 (Autumn 1952)-16 (Summer 1956). ISSN: 0553-7495 Index: Index to whole series published with final number Related Imprint: Intercultural Publications published a number of Perspective anthologies on different countries around the world, e.g. Carleton Sprague Smith (ed.), Perspectivt of Brazil [19S6), Bl: X.802/38S6.(S). They also published Tht Atlantic Monthly. Made possible by a grant from the Ford Foundation to promote American culture, this British edition of the American general arts journal was lavish for a literary publication: elegant understated typography and design, black and white and colour illustration, and many of the distinguished U.S. critics and wrirers of the day contributed, including William Faulkner, William Carlos Williams, Marianne Moore, and many others. Each was edited by a Single editor but Laughlin acted as managing publishereditor within the U.S. firm ofIntercultural Publications. Literary rather than little. Sl: P.P.6392.eci. CUL: LgOO.C.313 NLS: NJ.710 PER UCl: No. 1-2

79 Phoenix. Edinburgh: George Watson's College Literary Club, Summer 195O-[1974?] Bl: P.P.6203.bin.

80 Phoenix: a poetry magazine / edited by Harry Chambers; and others. Liverpool: [Phoenix], NO.1 (1959)-II (Winter 1964). New series, No.1 (Mar. 1967)-13 (Spring 1975). ISSN: 0031-8345 Poems and reviews, with a focus on the quieter, formally conselVative poets, e.g. Seamus Heaney and Philip Larkin. In the new series the first issue was devoted to the new Ulster poets, such as Heaney and Michael Longley, no. 5 was devoted to American poetry and no. n/n was a special Philip Larkin issue. Bl: 8 (Autumn 1962)-1l (Winter 1964); New Series, 1-13. (P·9 01 / 1493) NlS: New Series, NO.1 (6.1937). New Series 3-13. (NH.589 PER) UCl: 6 (1961)-n (Winter 1964). New Series, 1-13 Poetry library: New Series, I; 3-13

81 Platform / edited by Frederick Woods. London: [Platform], NO.1 [Spring 1953]-4 [Autumn 1955] Related Imprint: Platform Poets was a series that published at least one (untitled) collection, by E. L. Mayo, c.19S4, Bl: X.9so/37423. Not to be confused with the Platform Poets series of the 1970s. Poems included those by Maureen DuffY, W. Price Turner, Bernard Bergonzi (who was also associate editor), Christopher Goodwin, E. L. Mayo, G. S. Fraser, Elizabeth Jennings, Robert Garioch, Paul Valery (trans. Charles Higham), William Carlos Williams, Sydney Goodsir Smith, Peter Russell, Kingsley Amis, Philip Larkin, Alan Srownjohn, and Norman MacCaig, as well as reprinted poems (E. E. Cummings, Wallace Stevens). Nicholas Moore contributes an article in no. 3, "John Peale Bishop and the classic virtues". Bl: P.P.sn6.bna. CUl: l727.C.181 NLS: 1950.S8 UCl:No. 3-4

82 Poems in Pamphlet / edited by Erica Marx. Aldington, Kent: Hand & Flower Press, No. 1-12 (1951); no. 1-I2 (1952) Anthology: Sarry Newport (ed.) A Hand and Flower anthology: POtlllS and fablts commtlllorating Erica Marx and tht Hand and Flowtr Prru (No place or publisher given, 1980), Bl: YA.199I.a.r8IS8 Related Imprint: The Hand & Flower Press published

[105]

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 fiction and drama as well as poetry, the Latter including collections by Muriel Spark, Michael Hamburger, and Joseph Chiari, and Btowu!f (ttans. Edwin Morgan) Each monthly issue published the work of usually one poet only, building up to a yearly anthology. In the first year the poets included: Gwyneth Anderson, Robert Waller, Charles Tomlinson, Peter Russell, John Alden, Charles Higham, Arthur Constance, Rob Lyle, Charles Causley, John O'Hare, Thomas Blackburn, and Robert Manfred. In the second year the poets included: Frederick Pratt Green, Arthur Joseph Bull, Michael Hamburger, Juanita Peirse, Frederic Vanson, R. L. Cook, ALan Bamsley, Ursula Wood, Richard Heron Ward, and Jocelyn Brooke. BL: P.P.5126.bbt. CUL: L727.D.60

83 The Poetl [edited byW. Price Turner]. Glasgow: Venture, No. I [1952]-15 (1956) Anthology: [W. Price Tumer,ed.?] AVmturt of Potts, Glasgow: Venture, [1952] (BL: I1606.aaa.17); W. Price Turner (ed.), E1tvt11 Scotti5h Potts: a contrmporary stltction (Glasgow: The Poet, 1954) Related Imprint: The Poet also published the Poet Cameo Series, which published collections by Eric Nixon (StattmmlS ofLoVf, [1956], BL: W.P.36S8), Gael Turnbull (A Libation), and Hyacinthe Hill (Promtthta). Poets included: Derek Stanford, Tom Wright, Sydney Tremayne, E. E. Cummings (reprinted from another magazine, but with a new appreciation of his poetry by Price Turner), Margaret Crosland, John Atkins, Kathleen Raine, Anne Ridler, Hugh Creighton Hill, W. S. Merwin, John Heath-Stubbs, Kenneth Patchen, Bernard Bergonzi, Geoffrey Holloway, Norman Nicholson, lain Crichton Smith, Karen Loewenthal, Cid Corman, Gordon Wharton (issue 8 was entirely given over to his work), Francis Scarfe, Carol Hogben, J. F. Hendry, Robinson Jeffers, Tom Buchan, Norman ~acCaig, MerrilJ Moore (issue 10 was entirely given over to Moore's work), Edwin Morgan, Donald Davie, Eric Ratcliffe, Charles Edward Eaton, Gael Turnbull, J. Phoenice, Roy Fisher, Robert Creeley, Laurie Lee, Donald Hall, William Carlos Williams, and Burns Singer. Reviews were issued as a separate supplement to the magazine. BL: P.P.5126.bbz CUL: l727.D.81 UCl:No. 3,7 Poetry Library: No.8

84 Poetry I edited by Hardiman Scott. Birmingham: The British Poetry Association, [Vol. I no. I (I950)?-1951?]

The BPA appears to have been a rival to the Poetry Society, and Pottry was its house magazine. James Brockway, in Gilrtschacher 2, suggests that Howard Sergeant helped found it in reaction to Muriel Spark's departure from Tht Pottry Review. Brockway, then living in Holland, contributed Dutch poems in translation. Location varied: advertisements from different sources suggest London, Liverpool, Petersfield, and Birmingham. CUL: Vol. 2 no. 8 (1951), vol. 3 no. 9 (1951), no. II (1951). (L999·C·P97)

85 Poetry & Audience. Leeds: University of Leeds Student Union, [Vol. I no. I] (30 April 1954)-. ISSN: 0032-2040 Anthology: A. R. Mortimer and James Simmons (eds.), Out on tht rolJt (Leeds: [University of Leeds Department of English Literature], 1958), BL: YA.1995.a.22540; A. R. Mortimer ret al.] (eds.) Pottry and Auditnct, 1953-1960: an anthololJY· [Leeds: University of Leeds Student Union, 1961], BL: I1663.L3.; Lttds UndtTlJraduatt Pottryfrom tht FirstTm Ytars ofPottry &: Audimct. (Leeds: [University of Leeds . Student Union], 1963), BL: X.908/438I; Tom Wharton and Wayne Brown (eds.), 21 ytars ofPottry &: Audimct (Breakish: Aquila, 1976), BL: X.908/40673 Related Imprint: The Poetry 8< Audience Pamphlet imprint published at least one collection, by Brian Oxley, Porms, [I967?], BL: YA.2003.b.3781 In the early years, usually edited for an academic year by a single editor. In the first eight years these included James Simmons, A. R. Mortimer, T. W. Harrison (Le. Tony Harrison), and Desmond Graham. From vol. 33 no. I [I991?] published by the Leeds University Poetry Society. BL: Lacking: [Vol. I.] no. 1-14; vol. I no. 20; vol. 2. no. 10, 18, 20-22; vol. 3. no. I, 5, 10-12, 14-16, 18, 24, 25; vol. 4. no. :I., 4, 5, 9, 10, 14, 17; vol. 5. no. 1-5, 7; vol. 6 no. 23; vol. 7 no. 5, vol. II no. 7, vol II nos. 13-17, vol 13 no. 14, no. 19, vol. 14 nos. 6-9, no. 14, and all to vol. 29 no. I except vol. IS no. 2. (P.P.S126.nag) CUL: Vol. 5(11), 1958- .(L727.B.3Sl NLS: Lacking: Vol. II no. I, II, 17; vol. 13 no. 19; vol. 14 no. 3; all between vol. 14 no. 5-Yol. 16 no. I; vol. 16 no. 8; vol. 17 no. 13; vol. 19 no. 2; vol. 19 no. 7; vol. 20 no. 4-YOI. 21 no. I; vol. 11 no. 4-Yol. :1.8 no. I; all between vol. 29 no. I-YOI. 31 no. I; vol. 33 1991. (HJ8.I204 PER) UCL: [Vol. I] no. 7- • Incomplete. Poetry Library: Vol. 17 no. 2; vol. 20 no. 9; vol. 21 no. I-yol. 2:1. no. 5; vol. 23 no. :I.-4~ vol. 27 no. 3; vol. 28 no. 2-3; vol. 30 no. I; vol. 31 no. I; vol. 32 no. 1-[27]; vol. 35 no. 1-.

[106]

Chapter C: 1950-1959 86 Poetry Broadsheets! Cambridge: Poetry Broadsheets, NO.1 (Feb. 1951)-?

91 Poetry Periodical! edited by Irene Coates. Cambridge: Irene Coates, NO.1 (Autumn 1952)-3 (Summer 1953)

Index: 6 (July 1951) contains an index for the preceding issues Bl: 2 (Mar. 1951), 6 (luI. 1951)-10 (Nov. 1951). (ZD.9.b.54)

87 Poetry London-New York! edited by Tambimuttu. New York, Vol. 1 no. 1 (Mar.!Apr. I95 6)-no. 4 (Summer 1960) Note: Continues: Porny (London). Continued by: Porny London I Applt Magazint. Tambimuttu's New York continuation of his earlier London title, included here for its association. Two decades later it would be resurrected in another form, even briefer than this one. BL: P.P.761 5. ma UCl: Vol. I no. I-no. 3

Intended as an annual to encourage a greater readership for unknown poets, but appears to have failed after first volume. Two poems are tributes to Ezra Pound and Sydney Keyes respectively.

Note: Editors change over the course of the run Anthology: Doreen Taylor and Brian Wright (eds.), Porny Manchtlttr (leigh: Poetry Manchester, 1951), Bl: 1I606.bb.16.

Bl: P.P.5126.nae.

Poetry by Robin Skelton, Norman Nicholson, James ICiricup, Eric Nixon, Kathleen Raine, Peter Russell, Gordon Wharton, Jon Sillcin, John Heath-Stubbs, and others. Peter Russell contributes an essay on Edith Sitwell in the first issue.

89 Poetry Midlands. Derby: [1950?] Listed in Tract. No holdings known.

90 Poetry of the Soho Festival. [London]: Soho Association, [1], 1955 Note: Variant title: Porny Broadshnt Soho Fair BL: YA.2oo3.a.373 28

Bl: P.P.5I26.bcc. CUl: Periodicals Depts

92 The Poetry Year BOOk! edited by G. B. Spencer and P. B. Godfrey Bartram. London: Citizen, 1958

88 Poetry Manchester! edited by Doreen Taylor, Brian Wright, Peter Robins and Harry Webster. Leigh: Poetry Manchester, [NO.1] (Autumn 1951)-5 [1953]. ISSN: 0477-0951

BL: [1]-[2]; 4-5. (P.P.5I26.bca) CUl: [1]-[2]; 5. (Lg99.C.3.II2) NLS: 6.739 UCl: [2]; 4-5

"Porny Ptriodical has come into being because of the need for a magazine which will publish more forthright, satirical, or experimental poetry than is in vogue at the present day." Poems by Ted Waring, John Holmstrom, K. W. Gransden, Peter Daw, Alan Fowles, Frederick Woods, Todja Tartschoff(trans. leopold Sirombo), Gordon Wharron, Peter Craig Raymond, James Boyer May, David Stacton, lucien Stryk, Marion Deschamps, Norman Helm, Derek Maynard, Robert Ivy, Evathia Mowle, Enes Ramos, Keith M. Sagar, Victor Musgrave, Anthony Bailey, Glynne Hughes, Rosamund Stanhope, Alec Craig, Rodney Banister, Seymour Gresser, and the editor.

93 Promenade! edited by Ben Howard. Cheltenham, 195-? Most significant for no. 65, which is entirely by W. S. Graham and includes his own drawings and prose work. It is bound with no. 66 (which is mainly about W. S. Graham). Bl: 65-66. (Pressmark Pending) NLS: 65-66. (6.1579)

94 Prospect! edited by Elaine Feinstein, then Tony Ward, then Jeremy Prynne. Cambridge: [Prospect], [NO.1] (Summer 1959)-[6] [1964] A magazine that could be seen as an early Cambridge School journal. Friendly towards American experimental poetry, publishing e.g. Paul Blackburn, Charles Olson, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Ed Dorn, and Arthur Freeman, it also published short stories by Harold Pinter, Tony Ward, and Robert Creeley, and poems by Denise Levertov, Charles Tomlinson, Donald Davie, Desmond McCarthy, Jeremy

[1°7]

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 Prynne, and others. Donald Davie also contributes, e.g. an article on the problems of The Movement, and Prynne's essay "Resistance and Difficulty" is published here for the first time. BL: P.P.7616.pz. CUL: L727.C.271 NI.S: 5. (DJ.m·442(5) PERl UCL Poetry Libraty: [I?)

0481-2220 Published solely poetry, including Norman Cameron, Donald Davie, Martin Seymour-Smith, Robert Graves, F. T. Prince, Lynette Roberts, Elizabeth Jennings, Charles Madge, Michael Hamburger, D. J. Enright, and Donald Hall. BL: P.P.5126.bbw. CUL: L999.b.I.14 NI.S: P.la.1339 PER TCD: I47.a.67, NOS.I-8 Poetry Library: I, 3, 5,7-8

95 Q / edited by H. A. Barrington and Victor Price; and, later, others. Belfast: Students' Representative Council of the Queen's University of Belfast, No. I (Michaelmas 1950)-[no. 19?, 1960?] Note: Continued as: Q Rtvit1ll Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish Littrary MagazintS: an outline and dtseriptivt bibliography (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2003), BL: 2725.g.3414 Trundling cheerfully along with only occasional surprises, e.g. under the editorship ofT. Alan Bennett, no. 7 (Michael mas 1952), at which point a couple of translations from Prevert appeared (trans. A. W. Burrowes) and Philip Larkin contributed a book review. Larkin would later contribute poems and an assessment ofBetjeman', poetry (all in no. II, Hilary 1955, edited by Wesley Burrowes), and contributors would also include John Hewitt. Betjeman, returning Larkin'. compliment, reviewed The Less Decriued in no. 14 (Hilary 1957). Hilary is the second term (January to March) in the old academic year. BL: I-II (Hilary 1955). (P.P.6180.cgc)

98 Quixote / edited by Jean RikhoffHiIls and others. Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York State, and Stockton Heath, Cheshire: Quixote, No. [I] (Spring 1954)-24/25 (Winter/Spring 1960) Short fiction, a little poetry, and some essays on aspects of general culture. Despite the two locations, essentially a US magazine that was just printed for the most part in England. From 1959 published in the United States only. An account of the magazine's demise, involving the printer moving from England to Gibraltar, is given in the last issue. Contributors of poetry included May Swenson, John Lucas, Charles Bukowski, Jerome Rothenberg, Ronald Tamplin, and others. BL: [11-3, 5-24/5. (P.P.5939.bhf) CUL: L727.C.157

Review Fifty: a quarterly synthesis of poetry and prose / edited by Edmund 99

Cooper. Botesdale, via Diss, Norfolk, [No. I] Winter 1950-[3] (Summer/Autumn 1951)

Linen Hall Library, Belfast

96 Q Review. Belfast: [Students' Representative Council of the Queen's University of Belfast, No. I, 196o?-1961?]

Quarto: a quarterly broadsheet of new poetry / edited by James Reeves.

Short fiction, poems and reviews. Poets included: R. L. Cook, Friedrich Hillderlin (trans. Vernon Watkins), Gunnar Ekelilf (trans. Bertil Lange and Terence Heywood), Bernard Bergonzi, Joseph Joel Keith, Eric Nixon, Lionel Monteith, Iris Birtwistle, Mervyn Levy, Gilbert Phelps, Howard Sergeant, Ma~orie Boulton, Vernon Watkins, J. M. Calder, Takis Hagipanayotis (trans. Mabel and Terence Heywood), Anthony Garwood, T. H. Jones, Clarence Alva Powell, Phoebe Hesketh, Kenneth Lawrence Beaudoin, Antony Borrow, Lucile Coleman, Edmund Cooper, Jack Dalglish, Charles Duranty, Martin S. Dworkin, D. E. Edgley, Howard Griffin, Ralph Houston, Henny Kleiner, S. E. Laurila, W. McDermott, John BarroR Mays, Philip Murray, B. H. Ray, Bernard Raymund, Peter Robins, Hardiman Scott, Raymond Tong, and Anne Turner.

Dorchester: Friary Press for Quarto, No. I (Spring 1951)-8 (Winter 1952), ISSN:

BL: P.P.5I26.gcc. UCL

Note: Continues: Q. Because of the doubt over the start date, and its continuation ofQ, this title has been placed in this section rather than a later one. Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish Littrary MagazintS: an outline and dtS(riptivt bibliography (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2003), BL: 1725·g· 3414 Linen Hall Library, Belfast

97

[108]

Chapter C: 1950-1959

Reynard: the magazine of the Quaker Fellowship of the Arts I edited 100

by Katharine M. Wilson, and others. Reading: The Gower Press, Vol. I no. I (Sept. 1955)-? . Note: Each issue received a running number independent ofits volume and issue number, and later issues were designated only by a date Related Imprint: The Quaker Fellowship of the Arts published occasional collections, such as the anonymously edited anthology of poems by older poets, Vintagt Voiets (South Croydon, [1977)). BL: X.909/41963 A Quaker magazine. which publishes poetry. fiction. and arts articles. Contributors include: Christopher Fry. Laurence Housman, Laurence Lerner, Katherine Herbert, and others. BL: P,P'5939.cbh. CUL: 32 (1978)-[34]; [44] (1990). (4°o.C.566) NLS: Lacking: 1961, 1962, 1963, 1965, 1966, Winter 19 68/69, 1979-1980. (P.sm.342o SER.) UCL: Vol. 2 no. I-YOI. 3 no. 2; 1959; 1964-1967; Spring 1968; Winter 1968/69; Autumn 1969; 23-30, 32, 1979-1980

A general cultural review, with a strong interest in poetry, publishing poems and articles about poetry. Many of the Scottish writers of the day and oflater days appear in its pages including Edwin Muir, Sydney Goodsir Smith, Tom Scott, Bums Singer, Joseph Macleod, It Crombie Saunders, Robert Garioch, Alan Riddell, Edwin Morgan, Norman McCaig, Naomi Mitchison, Alexander Scott, George Bruce, Hugh MacDiarmid, William Montgomerie, Maurice Lindsay, W. Price Turner, Alexander Reid, lain Crichton Smith, Derick Thomson, Sydney Tremayne, Robin Fulton, and others. Includes signficant literary criticism by Edwin Morgan on Scottish poetry. BL: Lacking: Vol. 2 no. I-VOl. 3 no. 6. AC.9945.b/2. CUL: L727.C.160 NLS Poetry Library: la-II; 13; 16; 18-19; 22

Samovar: the magazine of the Joint Services School for Linguists I 103

[edited by Michael Frayn, Eric Kom and others]. Bodmin, then Crail: Joint Services School for Linguists, NO.7 (April 1954)-25

Rooster See New Rooster C65 101 Saint Botolph's Review I edited by David Ross. Cambridge, [No. I], 1956

[1959)

Profiled in: Elaine Feinstein. Ttd Hughts: tht lift of a port (London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2001), BL: YC.2002.a.II7 16 A magazine with a significance far beyond its pages. It was named after the rectory outside college limits where a small number of undergraduates and others associated with Cambridge University took lodgings. Several of Hughes's !>Oems were included in the only issue of the magazine, and it Was at the launch of the RtIIirw on 26th February 1956 that Hughes first met Sylvia Plath. The other contributors were Daniel Huws, Daniel Weissbort, George Weissbort, David Itoss, and Lucas Myers. A commemorative issue was published in 2006. CUL: Cam.c.21I.40 UCL

102 SaItire Review: of arts, letters and life I edited by Alexander Scott, and others. Edinburgh: The Saltire Society, Vol. I no. 1 (April 1954)-vol. 6 no. 23 (Winter 1961)

consecutive, so that vol. 6 no. 23 is the twenty-third issue of the whole run Profiled in: Sullivan 1914-1984

Note: Continues: Ttapot and Samovar, and takes up its numbering. No. 15 was not published. No. 16 was published in Crail, Scotland Profiled in: D. M. Thomas's introduction, Stertt Cllllirooms: An Untold History oftht Cold War, by Geoffrey Elliott and Harold Shuman (London: St Ermin's Press, 2002), BL: YC.2002.a.20997 The Joint Services School was designed to meet the Cold War challenge by teaching British servicemen Eastern Bloc languages, especially Russian. Alan Bennett, D. M. Thomas, Michael Frayn, and Eric Korn went through the School as part of their National Service. It usually appeared in Cyrillic, although there were also Czech and Polish poems in at least one issue. D. M. Thomas recalled that it "served up an eclectic diet of gentle mockery, short stories, anecdotes, reviews and essays on topics from the learned to the seriously abstruse. " In Russian, the title is written Camobap. Ttapot and Samovar, [Il (Whitsun 1952)-2 (July 1952). is held by the British Library and shelved with Samovar. BL: 7; 9-II; 14; 16; 18-25. (ZA·9·a.n8SI)

NOte: Continued by: Nrw Saltirr. The issue numbering is

[1°9]

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 104 Scorpion / edited by Ian Hamilton. Darlington: Ian Hamilton, [No. 1-2, C.I954.] Interview: Dan Jacobson interviews Ian Hamilton in London Rtvitw of Boola, 14th January 2002. Edited by Hamilton as an anti-school magazine, the school being Darlington Grammar School. The first issue had a foreword by John Wain. Noted in the London Rtvitw of Boola interview. No holdings known.

105 S.D. 's Review / edited by Sean Dorman. [Fowey?]: [Sean Dorman?], [1959-196?] Note: Continued by: WritinB Publishrd The predecessor ofa number of magazines, WritinB Publishrd, WritinB, and Writm NtwS, which encouraged cooperation among writers, self-help, and published short fiction and poems of an unassuming kind. No holdings known.

105a Seed / edited by Peter Ferguson and Liam Hudson. Oxford, [I?, 1955]-? Contributors include: Dannie Abse, Oliver Sacks, Peter Levi, Christopher Levenson, and Alan Bennett BL: [I? 1955). (Press mark pending)

106 Sky-Line / edited by Derek Townsend. Tipton: Edition I (Feb/April 1955) Short fiction, a few poems, jokes, plans for an agony column and children's page. Popular in tone, but seems not to have survived first issue. Poems by Eric James, Mary Ward, Joyce Dunkley, and Clare Withers. BL: P.P.5938.cax

St. Botolph's Review Set Saint Botolph's Review CI01 107 Stand / edited by Jon Silkin, and others. Newcastle upon Tyne, and other locations: [Stand], [Vol. I] no. 1 (1952)-vol. 40 no. 2 (Spring 1999). New series, Vol. I no. I (Mar. 1999)-. ISSN: 0038-9366, for years 1952-1983. From 1983, ISSN: 0952-648X Note: Absorbed: 3 Arts Quortmy and North East Arts Rrvitw. Tille variant: From 1983 entiLied Stand M090zint

Index: Sader (Vol. I (1952)-11 (1970) only) Profiled in: GOrtschacher I, Sullivan 1914-1984 Interview: with Jon Glover, Matthew Welton and John Whale, in Pottry Ntws: tht Ntwsltttrr oftht Pottry Socitty, Winter 2002/3, p.8 Anthology: Jon Silkin (ed.) Pottry oftht Committtd Indiuidual: a Stand ontholoBY ofpottry (London: Gollancz, 1973), BL: X·9 89/ 20509 Reprint: New York: Johnson Reprint, [undated] (Vols. I-Il only) Poems, short fiction and reviews. Special issues include: vol. 4 no. 3, The War Poets; vol. 7 no. 2, East European Issue; vol. 22 no. 2, In Memory ofNadezhda Mandelstam; vol. 23 no. 3, Modern Norwegian Writing; vol. 23 no. 4, Christina Stead: a celebration; vol. 33 no. 3: New African Writing. When Jon Silkin died in 1997, Stand continued for rwo years under the co-editorship of Rodney Pybus and Lorna Tracy before being relaunched and edited by John Kinsella and Michael Hulse, basing it at the University of Leeds. Following in turn their departure, Jon Glover became editor. Others involved editorially have been: Gordon Wharton, T. Heaton, Jack Kohn, Stanley Chapman, Gene Baro, Ken Smith, Tony Harrison, Catherine Lamb, Merle Brown, Michael Blackburn, Brendan Cleary, Evangeline Paterson and others. BL: [Vol. 1) no. 2 (1952)-. (P.P.5938.cau) CUL: [Vol. I) no. 3 (1952)-. (L727.C.193) NLS: HJ4.1328 UCL Poetry Library: [Vol. I] no. 2-3; [vol. 2)-Yol. 4 no. I, 3; vol. 5 no. 3; vol. 6 no. 2,4; vol. 7 no. 1-2., 4; vol. 10 no. 2; vol. II no. I, 3; vol. Il no. I-YOI. 35 no. 2.; vol. 37 no. l-YOI. 38 no. 4; vol. 39 no. 3-Yol. 40 no. 2.; New Series: vol. 1 no. I, 3; vol. 2. no. 1-.

108 Suppose Pig Walk. West Worthing: Fantasma, [No. I, 1950] ApparenLly only one issue published, edited anonymously. An 'open forum' of pre-election political comment. Includes a IitLIe poetry by Claude Len O'Shea, and J. Halsen. Typewritten format. BL: P.P.5939.bhd

The Teapot and Samovar See The Samovar C103 109 Thames / edited by Arthur Hammond, then Michael Craton, then Bryan Johnson and Muriel Starkey. London: The University of London Literary Society, [Vol. 1 no. Il

[HO]

Chapter C: 1950-1959 (1953)-no. 2 (1954); Then, London: King's College Literary Society, [no. 3) (1958)

Christopher Middleton, Edwin Morgan, Ronald Duncan, D. J. Enright, Elizabeth Jennings, A. Alvarez, John Fuller, Francis Hope, Bernard Kops, Oscar Mellor, Richard Adams, Tayner Baybars, Thomas Blackburn, Alan Brownjohn, Caryl Churchill (a poem), Peter J. Dale, Harold Pinter (a short play), J. H. Prynne, Robin Skelton, and others. Susil Pieris co-edited for the first two issues, after which Hamilton edited alone.

Poems only. Contributors included Frank Lissauer, Maureen DuffY, the Polish poet Cyprian Norwid (trans. Adam Czerniawski), and Gordon Wharton. Maureen DuffY was the assistant editor for the second issue. BL: P,P.5 126 .gch UCL: Vol. 1 no. I-nO.2

BL: P.P.488I.Sr CUL: 2-3. (L727.C.247) NLS: 5.6538 UCL: 2-4 Poetry Library: 1-3

IIO The Threshold I edited by Alec Smith. Mytholmroyd, Yorkshire (printed by Lawrence Warner, Hinckley): Alec Smith, NO.1 (1952).

II3 The Transatlantic Review I edited by J. F. McCrindle. London and New York: Transatlantic Review, NO.1 (Summer 1959)-60 (1977). ISSN: 0041- 1078

The apparently sole issue had poems by Kuo Ching Te (trans. John Brun), R. L. Cook, Charles Duranty, Albert Greenwood, Geoffrey Johnson, Joseph Joel Keith, John Barron Mays, Eric Nixon, Cecily Pile, and Alan Smith. BL: P,P'5 126. bby

III Threshold I edited by Mary O'Malley; poetry editor: John Hewitt; and others. Belfast: The Lyric Players, Vol. I no. I (Feb. 1957)-no. 38 (1987). ISSN: 004cH)562 Note: After Vol. 5 no. I, numeration changes form to no. 18,19, etc. Index: Hayes Selected contents are listed by EirData (http://www.pgileirdata.org). Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish Littrary Mayazinrs: an outlint and drscriptivt biblioyraphy (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2003), BL: 2725.g.3414 General literary review, with Ulster focus. John Boyd edited from 1971. 8l: Vol. I no. 1-4, vol. 2 no. 1-4, vol. 3 no. 1-4, vol. 4 no. 1-2, vol. 5 nO.I, no. 18 (1964)-no. 26 (Autumn 1975), no. 28 (Spring 1977)-no.32 (Wiater 1982), no. 34 (Winter 1983/84)-no.36 (Winter 1985/86). (P.P.5196.hb) CUl: 19oo.C.349 TeD: Lacking: Vol. 4 no. 1. (OLS L-2-18g--19 2 )

Il4 Trio / edited by John Bingham, George MacBeth and Anthony Thwaite. Oxford: NO.1 (195 2)-7 (1955). ISSN 0493-9 88 3. Reprint: Nendeln, Lichtenstein: Kraus Reprint, 1972

Tomorrow / edited by Ian Hamilton and

SUsil Pieris. Oxford: The Editors, No. I (June/July 1959)-4 [1960]. ISSN: 0495-8349 Interview: Dan Jacobson interviews Ian Hamilton in London Rtvitw oj'Books, 24th January 2002. Contributors to this poetry review included: Roy Fuller, Michad Hamburger, Michael Horovitz, Roger McGough,

BL: P.P.7617.br. CUL: P727.e.41 NLS: 2-60. (NJ.670 PERl UCL Poetry Library: 7-8; 10; 14-20; 22-23; 25-28; 30-35; 39-47;49-5 0 ;5 2-57

A magazine that published the work of Oxford students. Contributors included Alan Brownjohn, Thorn Gunn, Alistair Elliott, Jonathan Price, Adrian Mitchell, and others.

Uel: Vol. I no. 2-YOI. 5 no. I; vol. 5 no.l8-no.38

Il2

Drawings, prose, playscripts, and poetry. Eclectic, with work by Ted Hughes, C. Day Lewis, Robert Graves, Muriel Rukeyser, George Barker, Eugenio MontaIe, Austin Clarke, Jeni Couzyn, Stewart Conn, Maureen DuffY, Ruth Fainlight, Zulkifar Ghose, Giles Gordon, Jeff Nuttall, Lou Reed, Peter Redgrove, Vernon Scannell, D. M. Thomas, and others. Also involved editorially were Eugene Walter, Heathcote Williams and B. S. Johnson. Not to be confused with Ford Madox Ford's journal of 1924.

BL: 1-2; 5. (ZD·9·a.171) CUL: L727.D.IDg UCL

U5 Troubadour / edited by Raymond Buxton, then Buxton and Mavis Heath-Miller, then Kennedy Williamson. London: The Writers' Guild, [No. I, 195o-no. 4,1955]

[In]

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 Poems only. Contributors included Lionel Monteith, Terence Heywood, R. L. Cook, Elizabeth Douglas, Kennedy Williamson, Henny Kleiner, and many others. BL: [1]-[3]. (W.P.A.I41) CUL: L727.D.1OO UCL

Tydfil: a Merthyr Tydfil miscellany / edited by John Fletcher and

116

Lykiard, Derek Mahon, T. W. Harrison (i.e. Tony Harrison), Ken Smith, Peter Dale, Philip Hobsbaum, Ian Hamilton, lain Sinclair (apparently his first published poem, 'Cockling' in no. 7), Angela Carter, Stephen Mulrine, Paul Merchant, and others. The other editors included: Zulkifar A. Ghose, Anthony Smith, John Fuller, Bryan Johnson, Edward Lambton, Andrew Roberts, Christopher Williams, Dax MacColI, Anthony Tillinghast, Clive Jordan, and Peter Redgrove. BL: 1-4; 7. (P.P·5126.na) CUL: 1-3. (L727.C.286)

Harri Webb. MerthyrTydfil: Eisteddfod Merthyr Tydfil A'r Cylch, NO.1 (Spring 1959) A magazine linked to the Merthyr Tydfil Eistedfodd, publishing winning poems and prose but also offering itself as a "sounding board for the distinctive thoughts and voices of our community.· BL: P.P.488I.Sck.

117 Umbrella / edited byW. F. Holland, then T. C. Watson, John F. West. Coventry: The Umbrella Club, Vol. 1 no. 1 (Oct. 1958)-vol. 2 no. 8 (Summer 1962) The Umbrella Club was set up as "an independent, nonpolitical, non-profitmaking organisation for encouraging interest in art, music, literature, the theatre and kindred subjects. It arranges lectures, recitals, dramatic performances and many related activities .• The magazine was a general arts review with occasional poems, e.g. by Owen Leeming, George MacBeth, Ian [Le. Yann] Lovelock, Bryan Johnson, Zulkifar Ghose, Vera ruch, Taner Baybars, Herbert Read, and others; other contributions included essays by John Hewitt, Philip Larkin, Zulkifar Ghose, and others. BL: P.P.488ucp. CUL: L9oo.C.352

1I8 Universities' Poetry / edited by Bryan A. Reed and R. Bryan Tyson, and others. Keele: University College of North Staffordshire, 1 (March 1958)-7 (1965) Profiled in: Sullivan 1914-1984 The intention was for this to be a representative sample of • tudent poetry from the universities across England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales, but from issue two onwards there was a strong English bias and arguably an Oxbridge influence, too. Poets included: Malcolm Bradbury, Meic Stephens, John McGrath, Pat Rogers, Bryan Johnson, Dom Moraes, John Fuller, Jon Silkin, W. Price Turner, Christopher ~nlOn, Angus Calder, Alexia

119 Vril/ edited by Michael Hales, then others. Old Windsor, Berkshire: Beaumont College Poetry Society, No.1 (July 1956)-4 (July 1959) Short fiction, articles on just about anything, and poems. The third issue declared that it was now the journal of the Quodlibetarian Society. BL: P.P.5126.naa.

We Offer: prose and verse of the Poetry Guild / edited by John Hoffman and

120

Joan Haddock, then John Hoffman with assistant editors. Chesterfield: The Guild Press, Vol. 1 no. 1 (Autumn 1951)-[1959?]. Then, New Series, Vol. 1 no. 1 (Jan/Mar. 1963)-no. 3 (July/Sept. 1963).ISSN: 0508-1858 Related Imprint: The Guild Press, imprint of the Poetry Guild, which also published the Guild Poets series of poetry pamphlets, and The Guild Broadsherts. Contributors may have had to belong to the Poetry Guild itself, founded by John Hoffman in 1951, which was a "fellowship of men and women whose lives and talents are deciated, sensitively, sacramentally and humbly, to the apprehension and to the expression of the Greater Spirit. • Contributors included Hugh Creighton Hill, on bridging the gap between The Prelude and The Pisan Cantos, and R. L. Cook, Edward Storey, Geoffrey Holloway, Helga Petersen, Vernon Scannell, John Hoffman, Roye McCoye, Brian L. Pearce, Phoebe Hesketh, and others. BL: Vol. I no. I-no. 3 (Spring 1953); vol. a no. I (Autumn 1953); yol. 4 no. a (Olit/Dec. 1958). New Series, Vol. I no. I-no. 3. (P.P·5126.gca) CUL: Vol. 1 no.I-YOI. a no. I (Autumn 1953). (L727.C.175) UCL: Vol. I no. 1; New Series, Vol. I no. 3-4.

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Chapter C: 1950-1959 121 Windfall 1 [edited by R. L. Cook, Michael Levy, and George Kay]. [Edinburgh]: Poetry Society of the University of Edinburgh, No. I (June 1954).

were among the review contributors. Bl: P.P.5939.bhk CUl: 11-12. (l999.C.3.187) UCl

124 X: a quarterly review 1edited by David Wright and Patrick Swift. London: Barrie and Jenkins, Vo!' I no. 1 (Nov. 1959)-vo!. 2 no. 3 (July 1962). ISSN: 05 12- 6 57 6

Probably a one-off. this published poems by the editors, Alan Riddell, Antonia Sansica Scott, Kirsty Ross, Hamish Henderson. and others. BL: YA.1989.a.9557

Uel 122 The Window 1edited by John Sankey. London: Villiers Publications, NO.1 [195 0 ]-g [1956]

Index: With vol. 1 only Profiled in: Sullivan 1914-1984 Reprint: London: Barrie and Jenkins, 1961 (Vol. I only, with index); Nendeln, liechtenstein: Kraus Reprint, [undated]

Related Imprint: Villiers published a number of singleauthor collections, including those by Joseph Chiari, W. Price Turner, and Jean Overton Fuller. Poems and short reviews. Jean Andrews was also involved editorially. Contributors included: I. R. Orton, Margaret Crosland, Michael Hamburger, Terence Heywood, Nicholas Moore, Arthur Boyars, Eric Nixon, Harold Pinta (i.e. Harold Pinter), W. Price Turner, Robert Creeley (reprinted), Charles Olson (reprinted), Kay Johnson, John Heath-Stubbs, R. L. Cook, Martin Seymour-Smith. Vernon Scannell, Thomas Blackburn, Alan Brownjohn, A. J. Bull, Patricia Beer, Gael Turnbull, Roy Fisher, and others. NO.7 Was a French number, with translations of Rem' Char, Pierre Reverdy, Robert Desnos, Francis Ponge, and others, with translators including David Gascoyne, Michael Hamburger. Philip Inman, and James Kirkup. No.8 was guest-edited by Philip Inman. BL: Lacking: 8. (P.P.5 126 . bb p) CUl: 2"'9. (l727.C. 169) UCl Poetry Library: 7-8

12 3

Writing Today. London: Villiers, NO.1 (July 1957)-12 (Mar. 1962). ISSN: °509-3910

Profiled in: Sullivan 1914-1984

A. general literary review, edited anonymously. Despite never extending beyond rwelve pages and generally ~ublishing poems that were reprints from recent collections It reviewed poetry collections (e.g. Peter Porter's appalled review ofJudith Wright's anthology, NtUI Land, NtUI 14ngu4gr) and conducted profile-style interviews with John Retjeman, Roy Fuller, and Herbert ~d. Tbe magazine also earned general articles (such as Vernon Dodds on the effect of the contemporary paperback revolution on poetry, or Philip Hobsbaum on William Empson). The writers ~rnard 8etgonzi, Ann Thwaite, and A. C. [i.e. Alan] Brownjobn

A general arts review, which, apart from its considerable interest in contemporary art and fiction, specialised in publishing longer examples of poets' work, often with links back to the early generations of modernists. X included work by Ezra Pound, Hugh MacDiarmid, Stevie Smith, George Barker, Patrick Kavanagh, Vernon Watkins, David Gascoyne, Samuel Beckett, C. H. Sisson, and GeoflTey Hill, as well as Robert Graves, Anthony Cronin, Robert Nye, Boris Pasternak, Martin Seymour-Smith, Malcolm Lowry, Nathaniel Tam, Dannie Abse, Philippe Jaccottet, Dom Moraes, and others. Bl: P.P.5977.ae. CUl: P727.B.1I UCl Poetry Library: Vol. I no. I-VOl. 2 no. and vol. 2 no. 3 are reprints

I,

3. Note: vol. I no. 3

125 Zebra 1edited by Derek Maggs. Bristol: Derek Maggs, [Vo!. 1] no. 1 (Jan. 1954)-vo!. 2 no. 3 (Winter 1955/56) Note: The magazine became quarterly with vol. 2 Related Imprint: Derek Maggs published collections in the Zebra Poets series by W. Price Thrner, Derek Parker, Paul Casimir, Richard Easton. Poetry, short fiction, literary articles. Contributors include: Denys Val Baker (on the need for Little Magazines), Derek Maggs (on the first issue of Lehmann's Landon Magazinr), Brian Jones, W. Price Thrner, Edward Storey, Roye McCoye, Eric Ratcliffe, Paul Casimir, Richard Easton, Derek Parker, Tom Wright, Eric Nixon, Hugh Creighton Hill, Ian Crichton Smith, John Manson, GeoflTey Holloway, Elizabeth Louch, Robert NyI.', Raymond Tong, and others. Bl: P.P.5939.bhe CUl: L727.C.154 UCl: Vol. 1 no. 6, 10--12: vol. 2 no. I-no. 3 Poetry LibralY: Vol. 1 no. 8-vol. 2 no. 3

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Chapter D: 1960-1975 The Sixties and After

HE 1960s SAW ARE NEW E D interest in the Modernism of poets such as Ezra Pound, Louis Zukofsky, Basil Bunting, David Jones, and Hugh MacDiarmid. These years also witnessed the growth of contemporary approaches stemming in part from the influence of these older poets, many of them (including those named above) still active, partly through interaction with recent American and, to a somewhat lesser extent, European poets. However, the seeds of these developments were sown in the 1950S by magazines such as John Sankey's The Window [1950-1956J, Bob Cob bing and others' And (1954-), and Brocard Sewell's The Ayleiford Review (1955-68). As Wolfgang Gortschacher has pointed out in Little Magazine Proflles (1993), a number of significant magazines that presaged the Sixties started in 1959, including Agenda, New Departures, Migrant, and Ambit. If Gael Turnbull's Migrant (1959-1960), an especially important bridge between contemporary American and British poetry, lasted only briefly, Agenda, New Departures and Ambit have all been long-term survivors, though arguably most important in their earlier years. Agenda, in particular, is significant for its championing of Modernist poets including Pound, Jones, MacDiarmid, Bunting, and Zukofsky, through various features and special issues in the 1960s and 1970s. What is even more important to note is the greatly increased number of magazines in the 1960s disseminating the work of experimental or exploratory American and European poets - Black Mountain, New York School, and Concrete poets, amongst others - often alongside their British counterparts. By "exploratory" we can perhaps point to the tendency to explore the possibilities of the material medium of poetry, in relation to possibilities of imagination, thought, emotion and perception or, in some cases, primarily as an exploration oflanguage itself. We can also point to a desire to discover and deal with the unfamiliar, in various ways. This tendency has usually been in distinction to working with conventional modes and forms. However, there has also been the pos-

T

Chapter D: 1960-1975 sibility of working with, especially re-thinking, older forms, as with the sonnets of Edwin Denby, Ted Berrigan, and Bernadette Mayer - poets associated with the New York School. The terms "experimental" and "innovative" are more commonly used than "exploratory" - with considerable overlap, at least, even if the former terms are often employed with a more exclusive emphasis on formal experimentation. Concrete poetry emerged most clearly in the early 1950S (though with some notable antecedents). It's possible to distinguish two main strands within Concrete poetry: a more minimalist or perhaps constructivist poetry, represented by Eugen Gomringer, Ian Hamilton Finlay, and the 'Noigandres' poets, and the often more maximalist approach of such visual poets as Carlfriedrich Claus, Bob Cobbing, Henri Chopin, and dom Sylvester Houedard. (Visual poets like Cobbing, Claus, and Chopin were also very involved with sound poetry.) These distinctions sometimes break down - Houedard, in particular, also produced some very spare poetry - but basically there is a reductive tendency (in a non-pejorative sense) on the one hand, and a much more expansive one on the other. Concrete poetry was truly international, with representatives in the UK, Brazil, Germany, Austria, France, Australia, the USA, and Mexico, amongst other places. Working from a Scottish base, Poor. Old. Tired. Horse (1962-1967), under Ian Hamilton Finlay's editorship, published independent and distinctive American poets Robert Lax and Ronald Johnson, alongside the Brazilian 'Noigandres' poet Edgard Braga and the Austrian Concrete poet Heinz Gappmayr. Though strongly drawn towards poetry that was linked, in one way or another, to Concrete poetry, Finlay published various other poets, including Robert Creeley and Pete Brown, as well as the writings of the American abstract artists Ad Reinhardt and Charles Biederman, Other magazines representing various aspects of Concrete poetry and related work included Henri Chopin's au (196?-1974), Cavan McCarthy's TIaloc (1964-70), Simon Cutts and Stuart Mills' Tarasque [1962/63-1972], Thomas A. Clark's Bo hum e urn [1967-1968], Michael Gibbs' Kontt'XtS (1969-76/77), Nicholas Zurbrugg's Stereo Headphones (1969-1982), and Dam Sylvester Houedard's Kroklok (1971-1973?). Again, it should be made clear that while Stereo Headphones, for example, maintained an emphasis on Concrete poetry, it also published a varied range of experimental or exploratory poetry and art in its later issues. The final issue, no. 8/9/10 (1982), included visual work by Barry McCallion

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British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 with no connection to Concrete, as well as a text by Samuel Beckett and translations of the German poet Fredericke Mayrocker alongside Henri Chopin and also Robert Lax. Concrete poetry drew antagonism from various sources, including the editors of A.genda, William Cookson and Peter Dale. Cookson and Dale were equally hostile to Beat poetry and to at least some of the Black Mountain poets. Surprisingly, Ian Hamilton's magazine The Review, which especially promoted the poetry of Michael Fried, Colin Falck, Douglas Dunn, and David Harsent, devoted a feature in 1964 to Black Mountain poetry, guest edited by Charles Tomlinson. The issue brought together various poets associated with Robert Creeley's Black Mountain Review, including Charles Olson, Louis Zukofsky, Robert Duncan, Denise Levertov, Gary Snyder, Allen Ginsberg, Paul Blackburn, and Creeley himself. (Poets such as Olson, Duncan, and Creeley can be seen as affirming the modernism of Pound and William Carlos Williams, while developing their work in distinctive directions.) However, The Review's editor, Ian Hamilton, found it prudent to state that "The editorial motive of The Review in this project has been a documentary rather than, necessarily, a critical one. We believe the movement ought at least to be known about. " This cautious attitude was not shared by an increasing number of magazines in the period, enthusiastically embracing innovative or exploratory US poetry, Black Mountain and New York School in particular. Tom Raworth's Outburst (1961-1963) was publishing Snyder, Creeley, Blackburn, Edward Dorn, and Philip Whalen, together with Gael Turnbull and Christopher Logue, and the singular poet Piero Heliczer. New Departures, principally edited by Michael Horovitz, in its earlier years gave attention to American Beat poetry, but together with a wider range of innovative writers, artists and composers, including Heliczer, Charles Olson, Robert Creeley, Stefan Themerson, George Brecht, and John Cage. Resuscitator, later more of a platform for the Cambridge School, included Zukofsky, Oppen, Creeley, Eigner, Snyder and others in its first series (1963-1966). Cambridge School magazines such as The English Intelligencer [1966-1968], Wendy Mulford's The Anona Wynn (1969) and John James's The Norman Hackforth [1969] put their main emphasis on a distinctive tendency (or network of tendencies) in English innovative poetry developing from the work of J.H. Prynne, Andrew Crozier, and others. The first series of The English Intelligencer was edited by Andrew Crozier, the second series by Peter Riley, and the third series by James, Crozier and J. H. Prynne. Peter Riley's Collection (1968-70) printed Cambridge [u6]

Chapter D: 1960-1975 School poets alongside US poets (including Charles Olson, Jack Spicer, Robin Blaser, John Wieners, and Frank O'Hara) as well as Lee Harwood, Tom Raworth, and the Scottish poet Thomas A. Clark. The latter's namesake, the New York School poet Tom Clark, was another important source of UK/US interaction, through his involvement with The Wivenhoe Park Review (1965-1968) and his editorship of Once [1965?-1966?]. Tim Longville's Grosseteste Review (1968-1983/84) also promoted a confluence of US and UK poets, publishing Louis Zukofsky, Cid Corman, James Koller, Anthony Barnett, Roy Fisher, John Riley and Gael Turnbull, amongst others, as well as European poets in translation. Controversially, The Poetry Review under Eric Mottram's editorship (1971-1977) became a focus for experimental or innovative poetry, with a strong emphasis on US as well as UK poets. The Poetry Review, as the official organ of The Poetry Society, had been (and would revert to being) a conservative literary journal, although Derek Parker had pursued an eclectic line and published Gael Turnbull and Anselm Hollo, as well as Concrete poetry, during his years as editor (1966-1970). Mottram's intense commitment to innovative poetic tendencies may have alienated some readers, but helped enormously in disseminating US poetry (of this kind) in particular. In retrospect, his editorship of the magazine has gained an almost legendary reputation. Another editor who deserves special mention is the poet Lee Harwood. From around 1963 to 1969, Harwood edited or co-edited several important magazines, including Night Scene [1963?]' Night Train (1964), Horde (1964), Soho (1964) and Tzarad (1965-1969). Harwood (with his collaborators) published Anselm Hollo, Harry Guest, Pete Brown, and Libby Houston, but he also brought attention to European poets. Soho was a bi-lingual magazine, co~ edited by the French poet Claude Royet-Journoud, and included Michel Couturier, Alain Bosquet, Jean Fanchette, and others. Tzarad (which was incorporated with Peter Riley's Collection for its final two issues) had translations of Tzara, Reverdy, Cendrars, ApolIinaire, Soupault, Hugo Ball, and Max Jacob in its pages, as well as poetry by John Ashbery, Dom Sylvester Houedard, Brian Patten, Paul Evans and Chris Torrance. Julliard (1968-1972), edited by Trevor Winkfield, also included translations of French poets, such as Breton, Cendrars, Reverdy, and Michaux. Anthony Rudolf and Peter Hoy's The Journals of Pierre Menard (1969) and The Notebooks of Pierre Menard (1969-1970) focused on translation, including English versions of poems by Stramm, Pessoa, Char, Ponge, Paz, Takahashi, Pavese, and others.

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 The Menard Press, founded by Rudolf in 1969, has shown a similarly strong - though not exclusive - emphasis on poetry in English translation. Paul Buck's Curtains (1971-1978) explored contemporary French writing, often of a transgressive nature, as well as publishing innovative English-language poetry. In particular, Curtains made available work by Bataille, Blanchot, Noel, Jabes, Faye, and Deguy. More generally, Modern Poetry in Translation, which was started in 1966 by Daniel Weissbort and Ted Hughes, has published numerous special issues on non-English poetry from around the world in English translation. Anthony Barnett's Nothin.g Doin.g in London (1966-1968), with Claude Royet-Journoud as its editor for France, should also be mentioned here, as it published an interesting array of English, French and Portuguese texts (as well as music and artwork). With a strong interest in publishing visual art and illustration, Ambit, principally edited by Martin Bax, has published a wide range of poets, including Jeff Nuttall, Jim Burns, Edwin Morgan, Henry Graham, Florence Elon, George MacBeth, Alan Brownjohn, and Gavin Ewart. Jon Silkin's strongly independent magazine Stand (1952-) also continued to publish a variety of poets, with Roy Fisher, Ronald Johnson, Frances Horovitz, and Ken Smith appearing alongside Michael Hamburger and Geoffrey Hill. More consistently concerned with exploratory poetry, though still eclectic, Oasis (1969-), principally edited by Ian Robinson, published an extraordinary number of fine poets, including Lee Harwood, Roy Fisher, Christopher Middleton, Peter Dent, David Chaloner, Alan Halsey, Brian Louis Pearce, Frances Presley, Yann Lovelock, Tony Lopez, Ken Edwards, and Robert Sheppard. Michael Schmidt and C. B. Cox's Poetry Nation (1973-1976), while mostly publishing more formally conservative poets, included essays on William Carlos Williams, Louis Zukofsky, and Roy Fisher, as well as poems by W. S. Graham, who was beginning to re-emerge as a significant figure in Scottish and British poetry. It is impossible to discuss all of the more important English magazines, but it would be remiss not to at least mention a few more: notably Richard Downing and Andi Wachtel's Sesheta (1971-1974), Stuart Brown and Jim Burns' Palantir (1973)-[1983], Ken Edwards, Robert Hampson and Peter Barry's Alembic [1973]-(1979), Stuart Mills' Aggie Weston's (1973-1984) and Allen Fisher's Spanner (1974-). Great Works (1973-1979), edited by Peter Philpott and Bill Symondson, spawned the Great Works Editions imprint, which published Andrew Crozier, Allen Fisher, John Hall, Michael Haslam, Paul Green, John Freeman, and John Welch. The [lI8]

Chapter D: 1960-1975 magazine was later resurrected on the Web as an e-zine. David Wright and Patrick Swift's X (1959-1962) helped to bring attention to older poets such as Pound, MacDiarmid, David Gascoyne, and George Barker. There was also New Measure (1965-1969), edited by Peter Jay and John Aczel. Jay established the related Anvil Press Poetry in 1968, over the years publishing Harry Guest, Peter Whigham, Gavin Bantock, and many others, as well as significant collections of non-English language poetry in translation. In Scotland, Alex Neish's Sidewalk [1960] published American poets such as Ginsberg, Olson, Creeley, and Snyder, and French writers Michel Butor and Alain Robbe-Grillet, as well as Scottish and English poets (Edwin Morgan, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Christopher Logue). Finlay's own highly significant magazine, Poor. Old. Tired. Horse, has already been discussed. Lines Review (1954-1998) displayed an interest in Concrete poetry during Alan Riddell's second period as editor, in the 1960s (Riddell wrote Concrete poetry himself), while Robin Fulton (in 1967-1977) steered it towards modern European poetry; more generally, it remained a major forum for contemporary Scottish poetry. Duncan Glen's Akros (1965-1983) was another important magazine for Scottish poets, in particular championing Hugh MacDiarmid and also publishing Norman MacCaig, lain Crichton Smith, Edwin Morgan, Tom McGrath, Tom Leonard and others. Glen also maintained a small press, Akros Publications. Chapman (1970-), Scottish Porny [1966-1976], David Morrison's Scotia (1970-1972) and Scotia Review (1972-), Gallimaufry (1974-1993), and the Scots language poetry journal Lallans (1973-) should also be mentioned. So should some general arts magazines with a concern with contemporary Scottish poetry: The Scottish Review (1975-1985), New Edinburgh Review (1969-1984) and Robert Garioch and Edwin Morgan's Scottish International (1968-1974). Peter Finch's Second Aeon [1966]-(1975), based in Wales, disseminated UK, American and European experimental or exploratory poetry in this period. In addition, it included extensive listings of small press and little magazine publications. Finch also edited No Walls Broadsheet (1968-197°), with a mix of Welsh, English and Irish poets. Other Welsh magazines with an emphasis on innovative poetry include poet Philip Jenkins' Quickest Way Out (1969) and Ruthi Blackmore's more eclectic Paperway (1968; with Jaci Wilde) and Oyster [1968]-(1969). The AnglO-Welsh Review (1958-1988) was an important forum for Welsh poets, while maintaining a more mainstream focus. Much the same can be said of Poetry Wales (1965-), publishing R. S. Thomas, Harri Webb, [U9]

British Poetty Magazines 1914-2000 Sheenagh Pugh, Gillian Clarke, and others, though with an avowed concern with situating Welsh poetty in an international context. Planet (1970-), a general cultural review, has also published the work of Welsh poets. Vaughan Hughes' Pair (1972-1973) was a magazine devoted to Welsh language poetty (including visual pattern poems). Michael Smith and Trevor Joyce's The Lace Curtain [1969]-(1978) explored the legacy ofIrish modernist poetty (Brian Coffey, Denis Devlin, Thomas McGreevey), with contributors including Coffey, Samuel Beckett, and the editors, as well as John Montague, Eilean Ni ChuiIIeanain, Macdara Woods, and Anthony Kerrigan. Hayden Murphy and Benedict Ryan's Broadsheet (1968-1983?) brought together Irish, Scottish and English poets, including experimental writers such as Bob Cobbing and Dom Sylvester Houedard. Poetry Ireland (1962-1966), edited by John Jordan and then Theo Dorgan, and John Montague and Thomas Kinsella's The Dolmen Miscellany of Irish Writina (1962), were publications of the legendary Dolmen Press (1951-1987); with Liam Miller as its guiding spirit, Dolmen published John Montague, Thomas Kinsella, Richard Murphy, Austin Clarke, and Anthony Kerrigan, as well as Beckett's translation of ApoIlinaire (Zone) and Coffey's ofMallarme (Un Coup de Dis - Dice Thrown Never Will Annul Chance). All of these magazines were Dublin-based, as were such other notable journals as Brian Lynch's The Holy Door (1965-1966) and Eamon Carr and Peter Fallon's Capella (1969-[1971], while James Liddy, Liam O'Connor and Michael Hartnett's Arena (1963-1965) was published from Co. Wexford. Turning to Northern Irish poetry magazines, The Honest Ulsterman (1968-), founded by James Simmons, has been an influential and enduring publication; its contributors have included Seamus Heaney, Derek Mahon, Bernard McLaverty, Michael Longley, Brendan Kennelly, Paul Muldoon, and John Montague. Amongst other Northern Irish magazines that deserve to be mentioned here are Patrick Lynch and Michael Mitchell's The Northern Review (1965-1967) and Robert Johnstone, Trevor McMahon and William Peskett's Caret (1972-1975). Although not an Irish magazine - it has always been based in London - Eddie Linden's Aquarius (1969-) also championed Irish poetty; otherwise, it has been especially active in focusing attention on such poets as W. S. Graham, George Barker, and John Heath-Stubbs. Many of the little magazines of the period were directly linked to small presses. In many cases, magazines and books were published concurrently, or alternatively a magazine might [120]

Chapter D: 1960-1975 prefigure the setting-up of a poetry press. Amongst others, there were Migrant and Migrant Press, Poor. Old. Tired. Horse and Wild Hawthorn Press, Tarasque and Tarasque Press, Grosseteste Review and Grosseteste Press (later Gr / ew Books), Oasis and Oasis Books, Joe di Maggio and Joe di Maggio Press, Schmuck and Beau Geste Press. Other notable small presses active in this period include Fulcrum Press, Trigram Press, Gaberbocchus Press, and Goliard (later Cape Goliard) Press. Little magazines and small press publications were disseminated through a number of significant bookshops, including Better Books, Indica, Turret Bookshop, Unicorn Bookshop, and Compendium. Bill Butler's Unicorn Bookshop in Brighton opened around 1966 and closed in 1973; Lee Harwood ran the shop in the winter OfI967/1968. Better Books was in operation from the early 1960s until the early 1970s; in its heyday it was staffed by a number of poets, writers and editors associated with little magazines, including Lee Harwood, Paul Buck, Anthony Barnett, Paul Selby, David Kosubei, and Barry Miles, with Bob Cob bing running it from 1964-1967. During Cobbing's time there, it was a focus for alternative tendencies in literature, film, theatre and art, with readings, exhibitions and performances - as well as making relevant magazines and books available. Indica Bookshop and Gallery was started by Barry Miles with John Dunbar and Peter Asher in 1965, and the bookshop existed until 1970 (the gallery closing a year earlier). (Miles also published Lovebooks, with John Hopkins, and edited Lon.9 Hair magazine with Ted Berrigan, as well as being involved with International Times.) Compendium, which started in 1968 and remained open until 2000, benefited in its earlier years from the presence of little magazine editor Nick Kimberley, who had previously worked at Indica. Opening in the early 1960s, Bernard Stone's Turret Bookshop was another longrunning shop with a strong interest in small presses and little magazines: it only closed in 1994. Stone was also involved in running small presses, including Turret Books, with George Rapp and Edward Lucie-Smith. Turret published a variety of poets, including Louis Zukofsky, Robert Creeley, Ernst Jandl, Harry Fainlight, Stuart Mills, D. M. Black, and Michael Hamburger. This period is characterised perhaps most of all by the sheer number of little magazines that were produced. The increase in numbers was partly enabled by the availability of inexpensive print technology, especially mimeograph (a form of printing that used a typed stencil as its master). Migrant, The En.9lish Intelli.gencer, Tzarad, Once, Jeff Nuttall's My Own Mag [1963]-(1966}, The Curiously Stron.9 [121]

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 (1969-1975), Curtains, John Robinson's Joe di Maggio [1971-1975], Alembic, Spanner and the various titles from Brian Marley's Laundering Room Press (such as Loaded Drum (1974» were just a few of the significant magazines produced in this way. The total figure of new magazines is not the thousands of titles that are sometimes imagined to have appeared in this sixteen year period. Our survey finds considerably less than 600 across this time span. While likely to be an underestimate given the fleeting nature oflittle magazines, it is probably not a figure out by an order of thousands. Nevertheless a yearly average ofjust under thirty-four new titles (non-net) per year is an extraordinary figure compared to the meagre twelve new titles produced on average each year in our survey ofthe 1950s. The Sixties had a slow start: a closer look at the year-by-year birth rate of new titles suggests that 1963 was the key year, with twenty new titles in those twelve months, as opposed to just ten new titles in 1962. So many magazines closed between 1960 and 1962 inclusive that there was a net loss of six magazines across those first years. In 1963 the trend was reversed (twenty magazines opened, fourteen closed) and no further year in this chapter's period registered a net loss of titles. The boom years for new titles began in 1966 (39 new titles; 20 net) and ended in 1972 (47 new titles; II net), with 1970 being the highpoint for both number of new titles and number of title closures (54 new titles; 43 closures; so II net). A vision of many short-lived magazines fluttering out year after year into the light is not far off the mark. By 1975, however, the numbers appear to have declined: our survey records 28 new titles that year which, although a substantial figure, when closures are taken into account, gives only a net increase of 2 new titles for that year. The data from our last period, 1976-2000, suggests, however, that the following years consolidated and gently increased the growth of new titles in the 1960s and 70S, with a net average rise of new titles of just under 4 titles per year, rather than the decline that is sometimes imagined (more details are given in the following chapter). As our survey of the 1950S shows, the numerical domination of the little magazines scene by London titles had been broken in that decade: only 24% of titles were produced from London addresses. In the period 1960-1975, the message is substantially the same: only 23% of new titles came from the capital. The now traditional association of the Sixties with "Swinging London" on first sight seems to take a knock under this analysis. However, the lesser importance of literary texts compared to the more London-based [122]

Chapter D: 1960-1975 non-literary alternative press, commercial music, performance, fashion and the established print and broadcast media may suggest why London has a lasting place in memories of the Sixties and its aftermath. Of course, this percentage still represents 125 new titles from London: the nearest to that figure is the 25 titles produced by Oxford. Like Oxford in this period the other university towns continued to produce at the improved rates of the 1950S or higher, notably Belfast (12 new titles from 1960 to 1975), Edinburgh (13), and Cambridge (17). Newcastle (10), Birmingham (14), and Dublin (18) emerge strongly from a previously low publication base in the 1950S, a general decentralising trend that can be detected to a lesser extent in Cardiff (5 new titles), Exeter (5), Huddersfield (5), Nottingham (5), Bristol (6), Leicester (6), Leeds (7), Liverpool (7), Glasgow (9), and Manchester (9). Places of publication that registered for the first time in our survey, but which would take on significance in the following period, included Norwich, Maidstone, Sheffield, Huddersfield, Hebden Bridge, and York. Editors in the towns and cities of Yorkshire seem to have been particularly involved in the publication of little magazines compared to previous years. Given the importance of the "Cambridge School" poets it is surprising that Cambridge as a place of publication was barely producing more magazines per year than it had in the 1950S (1.06 per year compared to I per year). A closer look shows that in that decade Cambridge had been producing the highest number of magazines per year after London, so any increase would be from an already rather high base. A breakdown of publication dates also shows that most new Cambridge magazines were published from 1966 to 1972, arguably the heyday of the first wave of Cambridge School poets. Magazines in London, Hove, and Hastings during this period also published the Cambridge poets. Conversely, Oxford, producing on average the 1.56 new titles per year in this chapter's period, the highest behind London's 7.8 per year, failed to produce any comparable creative movement. This was a period in which strong specialisation occurred in magazines. Beat-style poetry and the slower, more clipped tones of Movement-influenced verse were strong default strands, but magazines emerged which followed neither, as we have seen in relation to Concrete, New York School, and Black Mountain poetry. Although the seeds were sown in the previous decade, our survey suggests that the publishing of American poetry and the translation of European languages may each have more than

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 doubled their yearly rate across this period compared with the 1950s. Magazines that devoted special issues to women's lit· erature, as a self·conscious movement or tendency, also began to appear, including Valerie Sinason's Gallery and the Caribbean·ori· entated Savacou; Women's Liberation Review devoted all its pages to feminism and feminist literature. Perhaps the most important 'poetry·demographic' story for the Long Decade of this chapter is not, however, to do with the urban clusters, aesthetic schools or the politics of this remarkable period, although these trends may be connected to each other. Rather, there is the statistic that people in over four hundred places up and down the country - nearly 80% of the whole survey of this period published small numbers of magazines (between one and four titles each). Many of these locations were small towns or villages. From Aberdeen to Zennor, a radically decentralised form of pub· lication had arrived. Together, this represents a considerable cottage industry, an often mimeograph revolution that set some of the ground rules for the successive publishing changes from photocopy to desktop publication and on into the internet world of e·zines.

,

3 Ans Quarterly See Three Arts Quarterly D478

(May 1969)-3 (June 1970)

60S See The Sixties D446

Poems, short fiction, and illustrations. An article by Richard Downing on little magazines in libraries is in New Series no. 3.

lIth finger See Eleventh Finger DISO

Bl: New Series, 1-3. (P.901/588)

365 Days of the year See Three Hundred and Sixty Five Days of the Year D479

About This: an occasional publication of poetry by members of Chichester Poets Co-operative / edited

2000 See Two Thousand D499 I

A: a magazine of visual poetry /

edited by Jeremy Adler. London: Jeremy Adler, No. A (I97I/2)-ABCD (1977) Note: The numbering followed the form A, Ab, ABC, and ABCD Edited from the premises of the Poeay Society. Contributors include 80b Cob bing, Peter Finch, Paula Claire, Jeremy Adler, 8etty RJIdin, Dom Sylvester Houedard, Bill Griffiths, Clive Fencon, Lawrence Upton, bp Nichol, Jackson Mac Low, Sylvia Finzi, cris cheek, Alaric Sumner, P. C. Fencon, Michael Gibbs, and Peter Mayer. Issue Ab features poets associated with the Visual Poeay Workshop. CUL: ABC (1975). (Lg99.8.1.596) UCL

2 Abandoned Notebook / edited by Magnificent Goldberg. Brighton: [Magnificent Goldberg, 1970?]

4

by John Bennett and Kevin Kewell. Chichester: Chichester Poets Co-operative, Vol. I (1968)-4 (1971) UCl

5 Accent / edited by Donald Cross and Fred Sedgwick. Exeter: St. Luke's College, 1 (1967)-14 (1973). ISSN: 0001-4486 Note: At least four supplements were published. BL: All issues, and four supplements. (P.901/334) UCl: 1-9,14

6 Acorn / edited by Alan Warner. Derry: English Department, Magee University College, Vol. 1 no. I (1961)-nO. I7 (1972) Index: Hayes Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish Littrary Magazines: an outlinr history and descriptivr bibliography (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2003). Bl: 2725.g.3414

Noted by UK Little Magazines Project. No holdings known

CUl: Vol I. NO.1 (1961)-no. 2 (1962). (Lg80.c.170) NLS: No. 17 (Spring 1972). (1976.66 PER) TCD: IN.C.MAG

3 Abject / edited by Jeff Cooper, Sean O'R.eilley, and Bob Tedder. London: Abject, [c/o] North-Western Polytechnic School of librarianship, [I, 1968?]-? Then New Series, 1

7 Acorn / edited by Gary Wilson. Huddersfield: [Acorn, No. I, I968?] Noted by UK Little Magazines Project. No holdings known.

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 8 Aegis I edited by Richard Landy and Andrew Hall. Cambridge: Emmanuel College, NO.1 (1973)-2 (1973)

CUl: I-II, 13-21. (l727.C.865) NlS: 13-16. (P.med.3262 PER) UCl Poetry Library: 2, 5-7, 10, 12-14, 17, 19.

CUl: 2. (L999.B.1.4U) UCl:2

II

9 Afrasian I edited by Nathanial Tarn. London: School of Oriental and Mrican Studies Students Union, University ofLondon, NO.1 (1968). ISSN: 0307-9953 Afrasian was the student paper of the School of Oriental and African Studies and for many years had covered other topics apart from poetry. This issue was guest-edited by the American poet Nathaniel Tam, however, and was devoted solely to poetry from Latin America, Africa, and the Middle East. The holding statements below refer only to this issue. Bl: P.P.76u.el. CUl: L999.C.3.420 UCl

10 Aggie Weston's I edited by Stuart Mills. Belper, Derbyshire: Stuart Mills, NO.1 (Winter 1973)-21 (1984). ISSN: 0140-9352 Index: UK Little Magazines Project Profiled in: a note attached to the index produced by the UK Little Magazines Project Related Imprint: Aggie Weston's Editions A statement carried in each issue: "The name of this magazine comes indirecdy from a work by Kurt Schwittersi 'A Small Home for Seamen'. I have been told that it was one Agnes Weston who founded the seamen's homes in this country and I hope this magazine will likewise provide some sort of refuge.• Agood-looking, even beautiful, magazine, with an interest in photography, and typically setting out poems with generous white-space around them. Contributors included: Thomas Meyer, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Thomas A. Clark, Stuart Mills, Simon Cutts, Trevor Winkfield, Andrew Crozier, Gael Turnbull, Richard Long, Robert Lax, and others. No. 14 reprints two letters from the East Midlands Art Association to Stuart Mills, the first setting out the terms of grant for any successful application, and the second turning Mills's application down on the grounds ofits luxurious minimalism: "the selling price was too low for the lavishness of production but unless the area ofprint in each publication was increased the public would not feel inclined to pay any more.-

BL: P.611/no

Agog I edited by Alan Kerr and M. Gibson ... and others. Bothwell, Lanarkshire: [Agog], Vol. 1 (1972)

UCl 12

Akros I edited by Duncan Glen.

Bishopbriggs, near Glasgow, then Penwortham, Preston, then Radcliffe-onTrent, Nottingham, NO.1 (1965)-51 (1983). ISSN: 0002-3728 Note: A supplement, Knowe, was published from No. I (Jan. 1971)-3 (Apr. 1971), Bl: P.903/91 Index: Scottish Portry Index Vol. 1 (Edinburgh: Scottish Poetry Library, 1994), Bl: ZC.9.b.6227 Anthology: Duncan Glen (ed.), Akros verse, 1965-1982: an anthology from Akros nos. 1-49 (Nottingham: Akros, 1982), Bl: X.950/17840 Bibliography: Akros: check-list of books and magazines published by Akros Publications, and earlier imprints owned by Duncan Glm, 11th August 1962 to Spring 2000 (Kirkcaldy: Akros, 2000), Bl: 2708.e.2522 Profiled in: Sullivan 1914-1984i Duncan Glen, Introduction to Scottish Portry Index Vol. 1 (Edinburgh: Scottish Poetry Library, 1994), Bl: ZC.9.b.6227 Related Imprint: Akros publish many mainly Scottish poets, Z20, and Scottish interest books Reprint: Nendeln, Liechtenstein: Kraus Reprint, [undated] (1-22 only). A key Scottish literary magazine, publishing poems, reviews and essays, in distinctively designed issues. The magazine championed Hugh MacDiarmid, but was also a great encourager ofyounger poets. Bl: P.901/1 CUl: l727.C.354 NlS:NB·n TCD: PER85- 34 UCl Poetry library: II-51 (incomplete)

13 Albion I edite(l by Steve [Stephen] Panko London: Albion, No. I (May 1968) Note: Includes a Supplement, Albion Awakes, dated March 1968•

Chapter D: 1960-1975 (Aurumn 1976), edited by Ken Edwards, focused on prose poetry, contributors including David Miller, Nicki Jackowska, Opal L. Nations, Ian Robinson, Steve Snider, and others. That issue also marked a change from the mimeograph stencil production to commercial printing, presumably offset litho. No.6 (Summer 1977), edited by Hampson, includes funher work by earlier contributors as well as by Rosmarie Waldrop, Tom Leonard, Roben Lax, Sarah Lawson, James Sheny, Elaine Randell, and Bany MacSweeney. With NO.7 (Spring 1978), edited by Hampson and Edwards, a more visually and physically elaborate issue was produced. This, the "Assemblage Issue", included the specially-mounted, blind-embossed booklet Honour can be bou9ht & sold like ... [by Tony Ward?], E. E. Vonna-Michell's poem about glass-paper, which included two insened sheets of that material, and many works of poetry, usually with a strong visual emphasis, e.g. by Peter Finch, Glenda George, Roben Sheppard, Alaric Sumner, Herben Burke, Paula Claire, Jeremy Adler, Bob Cobbing, P. C. Fencon, cris cheek, Lawrence Upton, and other poets published in previous issues. Edwards's acquaintance and correspondence with the Language poet James Sheny was one of the Anglo-American meeting points of the respective avant-gardes.

Designed to "spread the new awareness." Contributors included Michael Horovitz, Jane de Mendelson, Dave Tomlin, Brian Patten, Pete Brown. Bl: P.973/72 CUl: 1999.B.I.134 NLS: 6.1780 PER UCl

14 Albion I edited by David Kay and D. Robinson. Manchester: [The Editors], 1 [1970?]-6 [1974] CUl: 1900.B.394 NLS: 7.148 PER UCl: 1-5

Alembic: a magazine of new poetry. prose and graphics I edited by

15

Ken Edwards, Peter Barry and Robert Hampson. London, then Orpington, Kent: Grasshopper, NO.1 [1973]-8 (1979). ISSN: 0140-5 136 Interview: with Ken Edwards, in Gonschacher 2; with Roben Hampson, in Gortschacher 2 Related Imprint: Alembic Editions published Ken Edwards, Larca: an dtgiacfragmmt (1973), Bl: CUP.407.P.14. The first issue consisted of poems by the editors, plus Jim Stewart, and various illustrations. These were printed on different colours and sizes of paper, and simply placed in a plastic bag. It was sold at the Edinburgh Festival in the summer Of1973, in association with a sound and vision ensemble known to Hampson, called Zoom Conex. This loose leaf "bag mag" physical presentation, with a couple more poets added to the original editorial line up, continued only for no. 2, the next issue adopting a stapled card cover. The intention was announced in no. 3 (Spring 1975) to concentrate more on "one area of contemporary creative practice" and to represent the range of poetry being written in England. Funher contributors to this issue, which seems to take a significant leap towards the more difficult and the avant-garde, included Paul Brown, Lee Harwood (poems, and an essay on "Surrealist Poetry Today"), Ulli McCanhy, Paul Matthews, Jeff Nuttall, Boudewijn Wegerif. Heathcote Williams, and others. NO.4, edited solely by Roben Hampson, included work by Allen Fisher (and an interview with him), Jeremy Hilton, Bernard Kelly (including his compilation of quotations from American poets about Open Field poetry), Roy Fisher, Eric Mottram, Ulli McCanhy, Alan Davies, Mike Dobbie, Ilichard Miller, Emanuel Ro, and the three editors. NO.5

Bl: 1-7 (ZK·9· b . 159 6 ) UCl Poetry Library: 2-8

16 All In I edited by Nina Steane and Nina Carroll. Kettering [and Oxford?]: Nina Steane, [I968- 1 97 2 ?] Related Imprint: Nina Steane published: All in Portry Wallstickfl" (Kettering, 1968), Bl: Cup.2I.g.15.(19.); Ted Hughes, Autumn Son9from 5 Potmsfor Children (Kettering, ca.1970), BL: Cup.648.k.16.; and Gerda Mayer's Library foldfl": pomsfor our bookcast (Kettering, 1972), Bl:

X·9 0 9/42874 The UK Little Magazines Project notes that at least three numbers were issued. Unless All In Portry Wallsticker (see Related Imprint note above) is in fact All in, there are no holdings known.

17 Almer Parkes I edited by Alan Gardner. London, [I975?] Noted by UK Little Magazines Project. No holdings known.

[12 7]

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000

Alpha: a magazine of poetry and criticism I [edited by Clive Allison]. Oxford:

18

[Alpha], No. I (1966}-3 (1966) Edited anonymously from Trinity College Oxford, but ascribed to Allison by Chris Torrance, writing in Origins I Divrnions 6/7. Relatively large samples of work from a few poets each issue, including Jim Burns and Marion Knell. Illustrated. A heated correspondence in no. 2 about modern poetry and editorial policy demonstrates that even the quite innocuous poetry it had published in no. 1 was, for some, a challenge. SL: ZA.9.a.n668 UCL: No. 3

A general review, reflecting the varied interests of the university, but poems were occasionally included, e.g. A. C. H. Smith's long poem ·Structures of a Cancer", and others.

Amalgam I edited by John M. Wallace

and Wendy Rosier. Hounslow: [Amalgam], No. I [1967?]-S (1971)

Amoeba Broadsheet I edited by Robin E. Wild. Weston-super-Mare: Quickbeam Enterprises, No. I (1970)-25 (1979) 23

UCL:4-24 Poetry Library: 21

The Anona Wynn: a magazine I

edited by Wendy Mulford. Cambridge: [The Anona Wynn], No. I (1969)

Davison. Birmingham, No. I (1966)-11 (1970)

20

BL: 1-4: 6 (ZA.9.a.30S9) UCL

24

Alta: the University of Birmingham Review I edited by Peter 19

BL: 1-7. (P·S21/273·) CUL: Lg8S.B.I34 NLS: P.82 PER TCD: PER 8-54 1966-1970

(trans. Peter Hoy), Peter Finch, Doug[las] Oliver, John James, David Grubb, Nicholas Moore, Tom Pickard, Jeff Nuttall, and others. Elaine Randell edited alone from the second issue.

Contributors to this ·Cambridge School" magazine include: Peter Riley, Pete Bland, Nick Totton, Anthony Barnett, Ian Patterson, John James, Jeremy Prynne, Ian McKelvie, Elaine Feinstein, Jeremy Mulford, Douglas Oliver, Barry MacSweeney, and Andrew Crozier, with visuals by Peter Riley, Sarah Braun and Sophie Grillet Anona Wynn was a singer, and also a panellist in the radio show Twmty Qumions from which the magazine Thr Norman Hacliforth also took its name. BL: YA.1992.b.7479 CUL: 1993.II.230 UCL Poetry Library

UCL:2-5

21

Amarinth I edited by Criton Tomazos.

London: [Amarinth], I (1966)-2 (1966) Contributors include Jeff Nuttall, Bob Cobbing, Keith MusgrOve, and Bill Butler. UCL 22

Amazing Grace I edited by Jennifer

Pryke [Le. Pyke] and Elaine Randell. London: Institute for Research in Art and Technology, Vol. I [I969n-6 [1972?] Note: Continued as: Harvm Illustrated in a fairly hippyesque style, with poems by the editors, Barry MacSweeney, John Harvey, James Kirkup, Denise Deegan (later the author of the play Daisy Pulls It O.ffl, Michael HorOYitz, Anthony Rudolf, Francis Ponge

25 Anthology I edited by Janet Z. Gordon. Beaconsfield: [Janet Z. Gordon, 1971-1972?] Noted by UK Little Magazines Project No holdings known.

26 Antiphon I edited by Melville Hardiment and Caroline Benn. Glasgow, then London: National Association for School Magazines, Vol. I no. I (Autumn 1964)-vol. 2 no. I (1966) Note: Vol. I no. 3 has the date Spring 1965 on the cover, but the Winter 1964/6S on the title page. Continues: Hightimr Anthology: Melville Hardiment (ed.), From Undu tht Drsk: pottry and prost from school magazints (London: Max Parrish, [1964]), BL: X.900/Sl!0. Related works: Melville Hardiment would later have a poetry collection published by Migrant Press, Doazy Bar (1978), BL: X.9S0/9420. Caroline Benn, whose husband is the politician Tony Benn, has published works which

[128]

Chapter D: 1960-1975 include the book, co-written with Clyde Chitty, Thirty Years On: is comprehensive education alive or is it struil9lin9' (london: Penguin, 1997), Bl: YC.200I.a.1I41I.

NlS: 1-2 (Feb. 1974). (HP.I.79.4554) UCl

Set up, in the words of the first issue's editorial, to "consolidate the work already done by the Association and give notice of coming projects - whether literary competitions, conferences, courses, exhibitions or lectures. It will keep members in touch with each other's work and advise on many aspects of school magazine production." Each issue included a selection of poetry and prose from school magazines, and essays and other work by much more established poets, critics, and other writers, often giving a campaigning and intellectual framework to the project of empowering students through school mag32ines. Contributors included Anselm Hollo, Eric Mottram, Herbert Read, Alan Sillitoe, Robert Penn Warren, Michael Shayer, Gael Turnbull, J. B. Priestley, Michael Hamburger, Arnold Wesker, and others. Vol. I no. 3 also had a listing of school magazines. The Association had a "Magazine Centre" in Paddington, open from II a.m. to 6 p.m. on a Saturday where members could see other magazines and monthly special exhibitions.

29 Aplomb / [edited by Charles Verey] [Sherborne: South Street Publications?, 1969?]

Bl: Vol. I no. I-no. 3 (Spring 65). (PP.8004) CUl: Vol. I nO.I-nO.2 (1964). (l999.B.I.I09) NLS: VoLI nO.I-nO.2 (1964). (5.3673) TCD: VoLI nO.I-nO.2 (1964). (PER81-130) UCl: Vol. I no. I-VOI. 2 no. I (1966)

27

Ape. Kingston-upon-Hull, No. I

30 Aplomb Zero / edited by Charles Verey. Sherborne: South Street Publications, I (1969)-3 (197°) Note: Continues: Aplomb Related Imprint: South Street also published the magazine Bo hmn e um and the anthology of work by Thomas A. Clark. Neil Mills, and Charles Verey, Statements: an advtrtistmentfor txptriments in disinttgrating language [1971), Bl: YA.1994.b·9302 NO.1 was Dom Sylvester Houedard's 12 dan(tpoemsftom the cosmic typewrittr. and no. 2 was Thomas A. Clark's The secmy ciftht totally: collage and chance poems Bl: I. (RF.2005·b.61); 3. (RF. 2005· b·34) NlS: 2 (FB.m.52I(S3ll TCD: 2 (OLS X-2-1I4 no.6) UCl

31 Apocalypse I edited by Frank Flynn and David Sharkey. Liverpool: [Apocalypse], NO.1 (1968)-3 (1968). ISSN: 0570-4677

[1971]

Noted by Headland 8. No holdings known.

Poems, short stories, essays, line drawings. Contributors included the editors, Dermot Joseph, D. Black and others.

28 Apex One / [edited by Geoffrey Barrow and Gabriel Beaumont?] London: Inca Books, NO. 1 (Sept. 1973)-4/5 (1975). ISSN: °308-2814

Bl: P.90I/343 CUl: 1999.C.3-328 NlS: 6.1923 PER TCO: PER 80-807 UCl

Related Imprint: Inca Books published a small number of Pamphlet collections, printed by Covent Garden Press, including Hugh MacDiarmid. Son9 cifthe Straphim [19731. Bl: X.989/22350 Inca Books were essentially a second-hand book selling Company from Lewisham. They produced book selling catalogues issued in their own right. until catalogue no. II Which was featured as the middle pages of Aptx One no. I. Contributors included: Kathernine Tynan (a selection of her letters from 1884-5 are published in no. I). Stefan Martin, Guy Horton. Jack lindsay. Yann Lovelock. Richard Sylvester. and others. Bl: P'901 /IP5 CUl: l727.C.607

Note: Continued by: Aplomb Ztro Noted by UK little Magazines Project. No holdings known.

32 Apprentice: Oxford and Cambridge poetry / edited by Lawrence Stone, Stephen Fraser, Jeremy Helm. Cambridge: Apprentice, c/o Magdalene College, I [1970]-3 (1971) Bl: 2 (Jan. 1971) (P·901/84S) CUl: 2-3. (l999· C·3-426 ) NlS: I; 3. (5.5807 PER) TCD: PER9Q-S28

[ 129]

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 33 Approach Magazine I edited by Phillip Hodson and Trevor Pateman. Oxford: St Peter's College, NO.1 (June 1967}-2 (1968). ISSN: 0003-7125 Essays on topics across the academic range, but including, e.g. on Shelley and Concrete Poeoy.

BL: P.801/124S CUL: Lgoo,C'42I NLS: Y.13I.PER TCD: Per 80-206

BL: P.971/38 CUL: L9gg.C.pg6 NLS: 6.1761 PER TCO: PER 80-47 Ig67-lg68 UCL

36 Arc I edited by A. Ward [Le. Tony Ward}. Gillingham, Kent: Arc, NO.1 [1969}-14 (1972)

34 Aquarius I edited by Eddie S. Linden. London: [E.S. Linden), NO.1 (1969)-. Profiled in: Gonschacher I Related Works: Eddie Linden has been portrayed in a number of fictionalised accounts and/or novels, including Sebastian Barker, Who is Eddit Lindrn? (London: Jay Landesman, Ig79), BL: Nov.40391), a book which was made into a play by William Tanner, and as the character Sammy Giffen in Alan Sharp, Tht Wind Sh!fb (London: Michael Joseph, Ig67), BL: Nov.10708 Strong on essays and tributes to British poets, especially though not exclusively those who emerged just before and during the 19405, e.g. John Heath-Srubb5, W. S. Graham, and George Barker. Another strength has been the Irish poets it has published, including Paul Durcan, Seamus Heaney. Michael Longley, Derek Mahon, Medhb McGuckian, Paul Muldoon, EiIo!an N( Chuilleanain, Eithne Strong, Matrhew Sweeney, and others. Linden has often used the device of guest editor to take advantage of particular expertise. There can be a considerable time lag between issues, e.g. four years between 23/24 (lgg8) and 2S/26 (2002). BL: 1-18; 23/24-- (P.gol/SI6) CUL: 1"'5; g-n. (L727.C.402) NLS: 1-5; Il; IS-16; 21-. (HP2.78.8Io PER) TCD: 1-5. (PER 81-(46) UCL: 1-8; 10; Il; IS-17/18 Poeoy Library: 1-13/14; 17/18-

Aquarius: an annual religiocultural review I edited by Cyril Farrell. 35

Press, 2003), BL: 272S.g.3414 With a stronger literary content than its immediate predecessor, poets included Harry Clifton, John F. Deane, Seamus Heaney, John Montague, James Simmons, and Eithne Strong. Short stories and non-fiction were an important part of the magazine, too, including articles by Joan Baez, Estyn Evans, and John Hewitt.

Note: Two different issues each numbered no. 13 were published. Related Imprint: Arc Publications went on to become a publisher of many collections, usually with high production values Website: www.arcpublications.co.uk The first in this series of pamphlets was a sequence by Donald Gardner. Later contributors included: Alan Palmer (no. 2); Tristan Tzara, translated by Lee Harwood (no. 3); Ken Smith (no. 4-S); Christopher Hall (no. 6); Francis Bellerby (no. 7); Charles Verey, Thomas A. Clark, John S. Sharkey (no. 8); Paul Evans (no. g); Adrian Henri (no. (0); Bob Cobbing (no. Il); Paul Jenkins (no. 12); Brian Jones (no. (3); Peter Riley (no. (3); and David Chaloner (no. (4). It is often difficult to tell what number a particular issue is and there appear to be two no. 135. In some catalogues the number is not given. BL: 1 (X.goO/104S6); 1 (X.goO/II01S); 3 (X.gog/8084IS); 4/S (X.g09/ 80 416); 6 (X.g09/80460); 7 (Cup. S03.m.12.); 8 (X.gog/80839); 9 (YA.1993·a.13S40); 10 (Cup.Slo.alb.3); Il (X.gog/8066S); 11 (Cup.Slo.alb.1); 13 Jones (Cup·Slo.alb.l); 13 Riley (X.g09/13761); 14 (X.goO/IOS70). CUL: 1 (1993-9.1448); 4/S (1993-9·1448); 7 (864.a.IlS(51)); 13 Jones (864·a.II5(1)) NLS: 8 (6.1816); 9 (6.1915); 10 (6.lgll); 11 (6.1816); 13 Jones (6.1879); 13 Riley (6.1073); 14 (6.1126) TCD: 8 (OLS X-I-428 no.2); 12 (OLS X-I-428 no.8); 13 Jones (OLS L-4-3S1 no.lo); 13 Riley (OLS L-4-606 nO.7); 14 (OLS L-4-407 no.lo) UCL: I-S, g, II, 14.

Benburb, Co. Tyrone: Servite Priory, NO.4 (197 1)-7 (1974) Note: Continues: Eutryman: an annual rtligio-cultural rtvitW Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish Litrrary Magazines: an outlint hi.s1ory and dtserip1iw bibliography (Dublin: Irish Academic

[13°]

Chapter D: 1960-1975 37 Arcade I edited by Martin Leman. London: [Arcade], No. I (1964)-5 (1967). ISSN: 0570-6017 Largely visual, i.e. photographs, graphics, and some visual poetry. William Burroughs contributed several short prose pieces to the first issue. BL: I, 2, 4, 5. (Cup. 80s.ff.I) CUL: L992.D.6 NLS: 1968.89 UCL

38 Arcadian Guild Newsletter I edited by M. D. Hammond. London, No. I (Autumn 1968)-? A conservation pressure group's newsletter which also published conservative poetry and light verse, e.g. the editor's "To those who take transistor radios into public places". BL: 1-4 (Summer 1969). (P.90S/IO.)

39 Arcanum I edited by James Goddard. Salisbury: [Arcanum, 1970s; final issue, 1974?] Note: Related to Cyphtr Noted by UK Little Magazines Project. No holdings known.

40 Arena I edited by a committee ofK. A. Jelenski, Ivan Jelinek, Velta Nikere and Paul Tabori, and then others. London: P.E.N. Centre for Writers in Exile; printed by the Poets and Painters Press, [No. I, 1961]-26 (Mar. 1967). ISSN: 0570-7439 A significant outlet for writers in exile or regarded as dissidents, especially those exiled from Eastern Europe. Although the first issue does not mention it, it is probably a continuation of Pm in Exilt produced by the same organisation. There were poems, stories and essays, and often a feature themed by country of origin, e.g. Estonians, Ukrainian, Bulgarian literature, etc. Texts are in English and other languages, and not usually parallel text. Contributors include: Czeslaw Milosz, Aleksis Rannit, George Faludy, Jean Schlumberger, Marina Tsvetayeva, Boris Pasternak, Vladimir Nabokov, as well as Vera Brittain (lVriting in no. 4 about the importance of exiles to Britain), and others. Elizabeth Jennings contributes a review of a lithUanian anthology in no. 6. Stephen Spender and Nicholas Nabokov contribute a libretto in no. IS, and T. S.

Eliot "A Note on Translation" in no. 19. Arma appeared in a small attractive pocketbook format (18cm tall, 12.scm wide). BL: (1],2-12, 14-22. (ZA.9.a.2I48) CUL: 15 (Sept. 1963)-26. (L700.D.n) NLS: 15 (Sept. 1963)-26. (P.1S7 PER) TCD: IS (Sept. 1963)-26. (PER 80-34 1963-1967)

41 Arena I edited by James Liddy and Liam O'Connor and Michael Hartnett. Coolgreany, Co. Wexford, Republic ofIreland: NO.1 (Spring 1963)-4 (Spring 1965). ISSN: 0570-7404 Index: This Was Arma (see below); Stephen H. Goode, Inda to Commonwrolth little ma,gazints (New York: Johnson Reprint, 1966), BL: HUROII.3409171; Hayes Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish Literary Ma,gazints: an outline history and dtsrriptivt biblio,graphy (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2003), BL: 272S.g·3414 Reprint: This Was Arma, (a facsimile] introduced by James Liddy, (Naas: Malton, 1982), BL: L.4S/34S6 Microfilm: New York: New York Public Library, (undated] Contributors included Austin Clarke, Patrick Kavanagh, Thomas Kinsella, Mary Lavin, Derek Mahon, Paul Durcan, Anthony Cronin, Pearse Hutchinson, and John Montague, as well as Eugenio Montale (trans. Desmond O'Grady), Penelope Shuttle, Bertold Brecht, Miguel de Unamuno, C. H. Sisson, and others. Hartnett joined as an editor after the first issue edited by Liddy and O'Connor. BL: PP.800I.gk CUL: 1999.A.x.8 NLS: P.el.s8 PER TCD: Per 80-35. Also, This was Arena facsimile. (Lecky Library, HIB 820·5 K3) UCL

Arena: an independent student publication I edited by Paul Daniel Schedl

42

and Anthony Fiennes Trotman. Cottingham, East Yorkshire: [Arena], No. I (1966) UCL

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 43 Arkwright's First Magazine / edited by Chris Meade, KeefGreen, Jon Arnold and Nick Dalziel. London: Arkwright, No. I (1973) Naive poems and short fiction. Three of the editors played with the band Edge of AUgust, and Arkwright itself seems to have been the name of a band. Bl: P.901/1208. CUL: l999.C.3.602 NLS: HP3.78.1469 PER UCl

44 Arlington. Arlington Mill, Bibury, Glos.: [Arlington], Une (1966); Two (1967), [Three] (1967/68), Quadlog / Quadro (1968) Note: The last issue was published in Sherborne by South Street Publications. Related Imprint: South Street also published the magazine So hum t urn and Thomas A. Clark, Neil Mills and Charles Verey, Stattmmts: on odvtrtistmmtfor aptrimmts in disinttgrating longuagt (London: South Street, [(971)), Bl: YA.1994· b·93 02 Each issue accompanied an exhibition of concrete poetry and was itself an anthology of concrete poetry. The first exhibition was arranged by Ken Cox, John Furnival, Dom Sylvester Houedard, and Charles Verey; the last by E.M. de Melo e Castro and Verey. As well as the organisers, contributors included Ian Breakwell, Thomas A. Clark, Bob Cob bing, Simon Cutts, Tom Edmonds, Ian Hamilton Finlay, John Hall, Roy Hewish, Brian Lane, Liliane Lijn, Andrew Uoyd, Peter Mayer, Cavan McCarthy, Stuart Mills, Edwin Morgan, Hayden Murphy, Tom Phillips, John J. Sharkey, Trevor Wells, Abilio-Jose Santos, AntOnio Aragao, Ana Hatherly, Jose-Alberto Marques, Jose Viale Moutinho. There are original contributions, sometimes in colour, photographs of exhibits, and background information on the poets. Naturally, given the concrete poetry focus, there is a strong Brazilian contingent. Bl: Quadlog / Quadro. (YA.2003.b.1648) CUl: Une. (1989.n.1659) NLS: Quadlog / Quadro. (HP4.88.n43) UCl: Quadlog / Quadro. Leeds University, Brotherton libraty: Une; Quadlog / Quadro. (Special Collections General Literature 0-6 ARL)

45 Arnold Bocklin I edited by Mike Davies and Kathy Chater. Birmingham: Flat Earth Press, No. I [I974?]-7 (1976). ISSN: 03 0 7-6 148

Related Imprint: Flat Earth Press published: Mike Davies (ed.) Conumations (Flat Earth Press, (975), Bl: X.909/31388 Bl: 4. (Pressmark pending) UCl: 4 (1975)-7 (1976)

46 Artery / edited by Leslie Daly and John Brown. Kirkintilloch: Artery, [No. I (1968?)-2 (1969?)] Related imprint: Ethos Publications published Doubts & Mtmorits by Stephen Morris (Glasgow, (969), Bl: X·9 0 9/39868 Poetry and the then alternative music scene, e.g. review of a Pink Floyd concert. Contributors included Peter Finch (reviewing Adrian Henri) and Stephen Morris (poems). Bl: 2. (P.971/118) UCl:2. Poetry library: 2

47 Artery / edited by Colin Bibby, then Jeff Sawtell. London: Artery, [No. I, 1971]-Vol. 8 no. 1/2 (issue 28/29) [1984]. ISSN: 0144-8412 Related Imprint: Artery published at least six books in the Artery Poets series, which ran in the 19805, and included collections by Arthur Clegg, Keith Armstrong, and others. left-wing general atts review, often publishing poetry, especially poetry in translation, and often giving over essay space to discussion of poets and poetry. For a short time, Jack lindsay and Hugh MacDiarmid were on the editorial board, although this may have been honorary only. Poets included: Mayakovsky, Brecht, Volker Braun, Louis Aragon, Gioconda Belli, Ernesto Cardenal, Pablo Neruda, and a number of British poets associated with the magazine, Arthur Clegg, Chris Searle, John Green, and Keith Armstrong. There was also a collaboration between Alan Bush and Hugh MacDiarmid (a cantata), and poetry features from various countries, e.g. from South Africa and Mozambique. Bl: NO.4 [1972]-Vol. 8 no. 1/2 (issue 28/29). P.971/128 CUL: No.6 (1973), 13-16, 26/27 (1983). (l231.b.300.) NlS: No. 13 (Autumn/Winter (977)-no. 16 (1978). (P.la.6998 PER) TCD: No. 13 (Autumn/Winter (977)-no. 16 (1978). (PER 92-4 28 ) UCl: NO.4 [1972]-27 (1983)

Chapter D: 1960-1975 48 Arts Club Magazine, edited by Rod Brookes. Birmingham: [Midland Arts Centre for Young People], [No. I, 1966]

53 Assassinator Broadsheet, edited by Chris Torrance and Bill Wyatt. Croydon: [Assassinator Broadsheet], No. I, 1967

Some poems, short fiction and illustrations. None of the contributors seem to have gone on to publish more poetry or fiction.

Note: Continues: Origins/Divmions. Continued by: Broadshert (088). Related to: Maya. Variant title: Assassinators Broadshert. UCl: No. I (1967)

Bl: P.901/171 UCl

49 The Arts in Ireland, edited by Charles Merrill. Dublin: Trinity Publications, Vol. I no. I (Autumn 1972)-vol. 3 no. 2 (1977) Bl: DSC 1736.650000 CUl: Vol. I no. 2 (1972)-Vol. I no. 4 (1972); Vol. 2 no. 2 (1973). (4oo.B.315) NLS: Vol. I no. I-VOI. 2 no. 3 (1974), but lacking vol. 2 no. I (1974). (y.IOO PER) TCD: PER 94-657 1972-1977 UCl: Vol. 2 no. I (1973)

Short fiction, some poetry, reviews of books, films and albums, and comment about local events in lincolnshire. Bl: [I). (P.903/269)

51 Ashes, Newcastle upon Tyne: P. Laver [with financial assistance from the Students' Representatives Council, Newcastle University], [No. I] (1970)-3 (1972) Edited anonymously, but Peter Laver appears to have been one of the editors. Contributors to this magazine included Tony Harrison, Barry Cole, Richard Caddel, KoefNieisen, Alistair Elliot, Tom Pickard, David Constantine, Rodney Pybus, and others. Bl: ZA.9. a. l08 35 UCl

UCl

Note: Continues: Pottry One. Related Imprint: Poetry One published e.g. Tully Potter's The Emigrant, and other poems (1975), Bl: X.908/40265 Assegai is the name of a Zulu spear. The magazine was based around the Poetry One workshop, which met fortnightly at the Arts Centre on Billet Lane, Hornchurch. Bl: 1. (X.o909/725) CUl: l727.C.339 NlS: PER TCD: PER 90-718 UCl Poetry Library

50 As It Is , edited by Steve Saunders. Spalding: Steve Saunders, [NO.1, I974]-? ISSN: 0305--o53X

52 Asphodel. London: [Asphodel], No. [1968?]

54 Assegai' edited by Alex Smith, Tully Potter, and A. H. Snow. Hornchurch, London: Poetry One, Vol. I (1974)-2 (1976). ISSN: 03 08-5449

I

55 Asylum 'edited by Tony Dash and Brian Wake. Bootle: Asylum Publications, No. I [1967]-7 [I968?]? Note: Related to Driftwood Quarterly Related Imprint: Asylum Publications published Tony Dash (ed.) Anthology '!fLittle Magazint Potts (Bootle: Asylum, 1968), Bl: YA.1995.b.7249. This included poets from many other little magazines, and sports a cover pinpointing the names and locations of magazines on a map of England, Scotland and Wales. Contributors include: Tina Morris, Barry McSweeney, Alan Jackson, Dave Cunliffe, George Dowden, David Chaloner, Anselm Hollo, Peter Cundall, Alan Plater (a play, "The Rainbow Machine"), Pete Morgan, Jim Burns, Chris Torrance, and others. Bl: 4 (Mar. 1968); 5 (June 1968). (ZA.9.a.12IOI) CUl: 4 (Mar. 1968). (l999·C.3.288.) NLS: 4 (Mar. 1968). (1970·78.PER) TCD: 4 (Mar. 1968). (PER81-195) UCl: 3-6. Liverpool University Library: 4-6. Two copies of no. 6 with variant covers. (SPEC Merseyside Poets III.A86 4-).

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 Athlone Poets See Poem-sheet: Athlone poets D355 56 Atlantis / edited by Seamus Deane, Derek Mahon, Hugh Maxton, Augustine Martin, Michael Gill. Dublin: [Atlantis], NO.1 (Mar. 1970)-6 (Winter 1973/74) Index: Enda P. Guinan, www.may.ie/academic/english/atlantis.hnn; index to n05.I-4 in Atlantis 6. Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish Littrary Manazinrs: an outline history and descriptive biblionraphy (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2003), Bl: 2725·g· 3414

60 Axis Bag 1edited by Mike George. Rochdale: [Axis Bag, 1969?] Noted by UK little Magazines Project No holdings known, but related to Axis.

61 Axle Quarterly / edited by Alan Blaikley, Ken Howard and Paul Overy. London and Bromley, NO.1 (Autumn 1962)-4 (Summer 19 63) Bl: I. (PP.8000.gd.) CUl: 1900.C.388 NlS: 6.1361 TCD: PER 80-796

Broad culrural review with articles on the arts and politics. Bl: P.70I/390 CUl: Lgoo.C.457 NLS: NH.587 PER TCD: Per 81-195

62 Bad News / edited by Dave Wood. Nottingham, Dave Wood, No. I [1966] Duplicated from typewritten stencil. Arts reviews and some poems, all in a jokey style.

The August August See Collection DII7

Bl: P.90I/I22

57 Avellenda / edited by Robin E. Wild. Croydon: Quickbeam Enterprises, 1 (1972)-4 (1974)

63 Bananas / edited by Emma Tennant, then Abigail Mozley. London: Bananas Publishing, No.1 Uan./Feb. 1975)-26 (April. 1981). ISSN: 03 08-33 81

UCl: I, 2,4. Poetry Library: 1

58 Aventine I edited by Patrick Galvin and Peter Gee. Brighton: [Aventine, 1969?] Noted in Gana I. This Patrick Galvin, born in Dublin, is not to be confused with the better-known Irish poet, born in Cork in 1927. No holdings known.

59 AXis / edited by Barry Fitton. Rochdale: [Axis], No.1 (1970)-2 (1970) Note: Related to Axis Ban Associated with this magazine, which published poems and shon fiction, as well as debate about the arts, there was The Axil Experimental Poetry Theatre, comprising Barry Fitton, Michael George, Doug Kippon, C. B. Bostock, and Kath Richardson. Bl: 2. (ZD.9 01.137) UCl

An eclectic general literary magazine publishing essays and shon fiction (e.g. J. G. Ballard, Angela Carter) and poetry. No. 18 was a special German number, guest-edited by lain Galbraith. No. 10 had a special African writing fearure; no. 23 was devoted almost entirely to poetry, guest-edited by David Sweennan; no. 24 was a special French number, guest·edited by Adam Feinstein and Nicole Ward Jouve; no. 16 had a Dublin writing fearure, guest-edited by Dennis O'Driscoll. Emma Tennant edited from no. I until no. II, Abigail Mozley from I2 to 26. It had a broadsheet format from 1-16, then became a stapled magazine. Poets included: Ted Hughes, Ruth Fainlight, Libby Houston, Peter Redgrove, Henri Michaux, Frances Horovitz, Carol Rumens, Wes Magee, Harold Pinter, Ken Smith, Elaine Feinstein, Maura Dooley, Pete Morgan, Kit Wright, Penelope Shuttle, Jenny Joseph, Tony Curtis, Gillian Allnutt, Seamus Heaney, Thomas Kinsella, Douglas Dunn, lain Crichton Smith, Tom Pow, Brian McCabe, Ron Butlin, Roben Creeley, Roben Minhinnick, Jeremy Hooker, and others. " Bl: P.2000/379 CUl: 1-25. (l727.B.123) NLS: DJ.I.u8

Chapter 0: 1960-1975 Anrhology: Bean Train Press Readings: sdected poems, by crew of rhe Bean Train (london: Bean Train Press, 196?), BL: LB·3I.b.27930

TCD: 1-25. (PER 94-177 1975-1981) UCl Poetry Library: 1-25

BL: Vol. 3 no. 1 (YA.2003.b-4780)

64 Barwell Broadside I [edited by Toni Savage?]. Aylestone: [Printed by Patricia Green and Rigby Graham at the] Cog Press, No. I [1975]-22 (1977) Note: Continues: Cog Broadshut Study: Derek Deadman and Rigby Graham, A Paptr Snowstorm: Toni Savage & The I.tictsttr BroadshUlS (Oldham: Incline Press, 2005). This book also tips in many examples of broadsheets and orher printing, and comes wirh a portfolio offurrher examples. R.elated Imprint: Cog Press published a number of poetry and art-related books, including rhe Maltese poet Victor Fenech's London Pictures. and othtr pOtrnS (1976). Bl: Cup·SIO.cod.lo

67 "Before Your Very Eyes!" I [edited by Charles Olson]. London: Goliard, [No. I], 19 67 Edited anonymously by Olson. High production values, wirh strong visual presence. Contributors were Charles Olson, Anselm Hollo, Aram Saroyan, Tom Raworrh, Ron Padgett, James Koller, and Jack Hirschman. BL: CUP.510.dak.u CUl: 1999.B.I.l91 NLS: 6.2063 UCl

These one-sided broadsides were single poems printed on coloured paper, each wirh an illustration by Graham. They Were given out at rhe Ampersand Folk Club which rhen met at rhe Three Crowns pub in Barwell, Leicestershire. The poems could be contemporary. e.g. by William Oxley, or historical, e.g. by Oliver Goldsmirh, and rhere were a number of translations by Richard O'Connell, too. Bl: 2, 5, 6, 8, 9, II, 12, 13, 15, 16 (two printings, each on a different colour of paper), 17, 19, 20. and 22 (July 1977)· (ZA·9. d·557)

68 Big Carnell edited by Nick Kimberley. London: [Nick Kimberley], 1 (1969) Related Imprint: Kimberley published Sig Venus under rhe Big Venus imprint. Noted by rhe UK Little Magazines Project. No holdings known.

69 Big Venus I edited by Nick Kimberley. London: Big Venus; [printed by Roy and Erica Eden], 1 (1969)-4 (1970)

65 Bath Children Write. Bath: Bath library and Art Gallery Committee, 1966-1985 Note: Continued by: Young Bath Writrn Annual volume of poetry and short fiction by children and teenagers. al: P.901/75. CUl: 1969-198S. (lg90.B.199.) NlS: 1969-1985. (P.la.41S2 PER.) teD: 1969-1985. (PR 758 1969-198S) UCl

66 Bean Train. [Vol. 1 no. 1- vol. 3 no. I?] [London: c.1963] Note: Appears also to have been known as Stan Train Exprtss and Stan Train Press Related Imprint: Bean Train Press published Spike Hawkins, Too Few Moats and Old Brid9ts [1963], Sl: CUp.21.g.26(21), and co-published rhe magazine Ni9ht Train.

Note: No.2 is entitled Big Big Venus, no. 3 is Big Bill Bill Venus. and no. 4 is Quttn Camd, Sisttr to Bill Venus. Related Imprint: Big Venus published a number of pamphlets including larry Eigner's Valleys, Branches (1969), BL: X.9S0/S2lS and Dody Pitter's The Face in the Tear [1969] (no known holdings, but advertised in no. 3). Almost wholly poetry wirh a very small amount of visual work; no reviews. Stapled, mimeographed text, wirh soft card covers. Contributors include: John Ashbery, Clayton Eshleman, Andrew Crozier, Bob Cobbing, Stuart Montgomery, Peter Riley, Bill Butler, George Dowden, Allen Fisher, Tom Raworrh, Anselm Hollo, Barry MacSweeney, John James, Fred Buck, David Chaloner, Daphne Marlatt, Kris Hemensley, larry Eigner, and Gerard Malanga (in conversation wirh Andy Warhol and orhers). Paul Buck contributes rhe violent rape text "a cunt not fit for the queen" in no. 2. This appears to have amacted very little attention until republished in the Manchester counterculture magazine Corridor in 1971, when it caused rhe printers to refuse to print it. Nick Kimberley worked in rhe famous Compendium bookshop in Camden, where he

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British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 developed a strong emphasis on contemporary American poetry as well as avant-garde British texts. Later, he would be as well known as a classical music and opera critic. BL: I (X.902/2ISI); 2 (X.900/I6u8); 3 (X·900/I6u7); 4 (X·900/I6u6) CUL: L727.b.364 UCL Poetry Library: 4

74 Blue Food I edited by John Lyle. Sidmouth, Devon: Transformaction, I (1970)-3 (197°) Related Imprint: Transformaction's main publication was the surrealist magazine Traniformaction Contributors included Ian Breakwell and others. UCL

70 Black Columbus I edited by John Akeroyd, Nick Toczek and others. Birmingham: University of Birmingham Students' Union, Vol. I (1971)-5 (1972)

75 The Blue Front Door I edited by George English. [Durham]: [George English], [No. I, 1972-nO. 2, 1972]

Black Columbus was the name of a group of poets based at the university, and who included the editors, Sue Hicks, and others.

A general arts magazine for the county of Durham. Issue 2 contained concrete poetry by Robin Crozier and poems by B. Taylor, R. I. Caddel [i.e. Richard Cadden and 1. W. McCracken.

UCL: Vol. I, 3; 5·

BL: 2 [1972]. (P.971/4I8) Durham University Library: L 050 BLU /I Nos.I-2; [197 1-72]

71 Black Country Meat Chronicle I edited by Richard Miller. Edgbaston, Birmingham: BMC Press, No. I (1969)-17 (197°)

76 The Blue Tunnell edited by Ian Gardner. Bradford: Ian Gardner, [No. I, 1973-17,I979?]

Concrete and visual poetry as well as more conventional work. No. 17 was a "bag mag" or "assemblage", i.e. loose leafin a plastic folder. Contributors included leffNuttall, Thomas A. Clark, Bill Butler, Jim Pennington, Peter Finch, Paul Brown, and others.

Note: Continued by: [New Arcadian Broadshetll Related Imprint: Blue Tunnel published Patrick Byres' Happy Valley, concerning the landscape gardens ofCulzean Castle (1978), BL: YD.2004.b.III5

BL: 2 (Sept. 1969); 17 [x970]. (ZA·9·ad.623) TCO: 1 (Sept. 1969) (OLS X-l-I2I no.6,7 Copy A); 17 [1970] (OLS X-l-Ill no.8 Copy B) UCL: 1 (Sept. 1969) King's College London, Eric Mottram Archive: 17. (7/85/1 [x9 69lJ

Very close in style to Tarasque Press'. Privatt Tutor of a few years earlier, this also has a one A4 sheet format and the emphasis on minimalism. As well as Gardner, contributors included: Astrid Wilson, Anne Gardner, Simon Cutts, Pete Wall, Edward Lucie-Smith, Rod Gathercole, and others. It was issued free to those who expressed an interest in it.

72 Black Eggs I edited by Pat Waiters, Duncan Tweedale, Paul Smith and Gabrielle Hinton. Winchester: Blue Dog Publications, NO.1 (1971)-3 (1972) UCL Poetry Library: 1

73 Blackburn Barker I edited by Ian Ross and Dave Cunliffe. [Blackburn, C.1974] Note: Related to Global TaptStTy Journal Noted by the UK Little Magazines Project. No holdings known.

BL: RF.2005.b.2I UCL: Fourteen unnumbered issues from C.1974-1976

77 Blueprint: annual magazine of the Cambridge Poetry Society I edited by Richard Tabor, then an editorial board of Tabor, Peter Robinson and Aidan Semmens; then Richard Tabor alone; then Tabor and Edward Fox. Cambridge: c/o Jesus College, Cambridge, Cambridge Blue Room Poetry Workshop (later known as the Cambridge Poetry Society), [No. I, Spring 1975]-[5, 1979] Not to be confused with the magazine of the Cambridge

[136]

Chapter D: 1960-1975 80 The Book ofInvasions I edited by Eamon Carr and Peter Fallon. Dublin: Tara Telephone, Chapter 1 (1969)-4 (1970)

University Conservative Association, also called Blutprin!. The complex editorial succession seems also to have involved Chris Goode; a chronology in no. 5 setting out the magazine's history does not wholly clarifY the process or to What extent the Cambridge Poetry Society was involved. Contributors included Rod Mengham, Geoffi-ey Ward, Allen Fisher, Glenda George, Ulli McCarthy, lynn Moore, Edwin Morgan, Tom Raworth, Carlyle Reedy, Alaric SUmner, and others.

Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish Littrary Magazints: an outline history and descriptive bibliography (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2003), Bl: 2725·g·3414 Related Imprint: Tara Telephone also published Capella and a number of poetry collections, e.g. from Gerald Smyth and Brendan Kennelly respectively.

Bl: I; 5. (P.901/1299) CUl: CAM.B.2!.5 1 NLS: 1-3 (Mar. 1977). (HP3.80.2129 PER) TCO: 1-3 (Mar. 1977). (PER81-225) UCl: 4-[S), 1978-1979

Folded broadsheet format. Contributors included the editors, Brendan Kennelly, Roger McGough, Sue Evans, Wes Magee, Jim Burns, Adrian Henri, and others. Bl: 2-4. (P·9 01 /7 1 3·) CUl: 2-4· (l7 27· C·435) NlS: 1972.297 TCO: 194.P.IO UCl

78 Bo Heem E Urn I edited by Thomas A. Clark. [SherborneJ: South Street, 1 [1967J-5 [Dec. 1968J ISSN: 0523-7726 R.elated Imprint: South Street also published the exhibition anthology series Arlington and Thomas A. Clark, Neil Mills and Charles Verey, Stattlllmts: an advmi5tmmt for exptrimmts in disinttgrating language [1971). Bl: YA.1994.b.9302

81 Both Sides Now I edited by Robert King. Belfast: Northern Ireland Small Press Syndicate, (No. IJ (1974)-2 [1974J

Some issues would be a single author's collections, e.g no. 3 was Charles Verey's An Explosion Without a Fuse, and no. 5 Was Thomas A. Clark's Alrxandtr's Gazt.

Free to all subscribers ofld and Ego and to members of the Northern Ireland Small Press Syndicate. Contributors included: Peter Fallon, William Oxley, Colin Nixon, George Cairncross, Steve Sneyd, and others. Terri Hooley was also associated with the magazine.

Bl: 3-5. (ZA.9.a.Il214). CUl: 3-5. (l727.c.390) NLS: 3-S. (6.1923 PER) TCO: 3-S. (PER81-217) UCl: I, 3-5.

Bl: X.0902/Il8 TCO: OlS X-2-158 no.15- 16 UCl

79 Bogg I edited by George Cairncross and Trevor Greenley, John Elsberg and others. Leeds: Fiasco Publications, NO.1 [1968?J- . ISSN 0882-648X

82 Breakfast I edited by Brian Marley. Heaton, Newcastle upon Tyne: Laundering Room Press, [IJ First Quarter 1974

R.elated Imprint: Bogg Free-For-Postage Publications; and Fiasco Publications which published George Cairncross, A Frimd '!ftht Proplt: bring ant man's saga '!ftht sixtits and dtdicottd to all thost who Ultl"t thtrt [19771. Bl: X.900/253S7 Contributors in the early days included the editors, laWrence Upton, Gerald England. Steve Sneyd, Colin Nixon, and others. Many of the poems imply a sexuallibertarianism. Later co-published in Vermont. Bl: P'905/l6 CUl: 35 [1977)-. (l727.B.198.) NI.S: 35 [1977)-. Lacking 57 (1987). (HJ9.2227 PER) TeO: 35 [I977Hi7 (1995). (PER 77-4671977-1995)

Note: continued by: loaded Drum Related Imprint: Laundering Room also published several pamphlet collections, e.g. by Elaine Randell and by Jeremy Reed. Contributors: Asa Benveniste, Tony Jackson, David Miller, Spike Hawkins, Elaine Randell, Andrew Crozier, BockrisWylie, Tim Reynolds, Barry MacSweeney, Martin Thom, Tom Raworth, Ulli McCarthy, Paul Gogarty, and Opal L. Nations. Bl: RF.2005·b·92 CUl: 864·a.174(3) UCl

\JCL: I, 3-. Poetry Libraty: 40 [197-?). 44 (198o), 63 (1990)- .

[137]

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 83 Breakthru International Poetry Magazine I edited by Ken Geering.

85 Brecht Times I edited by Peter Langford. Welwyn: Brecht Times Press, I

Lindfield: Ken Geering, Vol. I no. I (Nov.IDec. 1961 )-vol. II no. 57 (Autumn 1972) Note: The volume designation is independent of the number designation. Related Imprint: Breakthru Publications Anthology: Ken Geering (ed.), It's World That Makrs Tht Lout Go Round: modtm pottry stlrctrd from Breakthru inttmational pottry magazint (London: Corgi, 1968), BL: X.908/I6767 Typed foolscap format, publishing reviews and a vast number of poets each issue (regularly, well over a hundred). Almost all the poets (with the exception ofD. M. Black and a few others) appear never to have gone on to have their own collections. BL: Vol. 2, no. 8 (Jan./Feb. 1962)-vol. 2, no. 12 (Sep./Oct. 1963); vol. 5, no. 30 (Sep./Oct 1966); vol. 6, no. 33 (Mar./Apr. 1967), no. 35 (Jul./Aug. 1967); vol. 7, no. 37 (Nov./Dec. 1967), no. 40 (May/June 1968), no. 42 (Sept./Oct. 1968); vol. 8, no. 43 (Nov./Dec. 1968), no. 45 (Mar./Apr. 1969)-vol.lI, no. 57 (Aurumn 1972). (P·905/13J' CUL: Vol. 1 no. 4 (May/June 1962)-vol. II no. 57 (Aurumn 197 2). (L7 27· B·41.) NLS: Vol. 1 no. 4 (May/June 1962)-vol. II no. 57 (Aurumn 1972). Library lacks: Vol. 5 no. 28 (Mar./Apr. 1966) ; vol. II no. 56 (Summer 1972). (P.99 PER) TCD: PER8D-93 1962-1972 UCL: 9. 11-12. 16-17, 19-22, 34-53, 57

84 Breath of Fresh Air. [Belfast]: Inner City Publications, [1] [1972?]-2 [1973?], and poetry supplement [19747]

BL: 1-2. (P.901/949) CUL, L727.b.1I6 NLS: 6.2660 UCL Poetry Library

86 Briefl [edited by Alasdair Aston]. Dulwich, London; Dulwich Poetry Group, No. I (Nov. 1970)-[39] (March 1976) Contributors included: Anthony Barnett, Edwin Brock, Ruth Fainlight, and others. BL: Lacking Dec. 1974. (P.903/324.) CUL: L727.B.161 UCL

87 Broadsheet I by Philip Ward. North Harrow: Philip Ward, No. I (1961)-3 (1962) Poems solely by Philip Ward.

Note: Imprint varies: Fresh Garbage was also one ofits publishers.

BL: P.P.7616.no

Contributors included Steve Sneyd, Tina Fulker, Opal Nations. Gerald England. Colin Nixon, and others. Edited anonymously. Dedicated in the first editorial, "to the people of Belfast who may not know but they are beautiful, if only they would wave their own flags, and not the flags of the power strucrure (the people who are keeping them down)". BL: [I] [1972n-2 [1973?]. and poetry supplement [l974?]. (P·975/47·) TCD: 16 sheets loose in cut-out folder with red rubber balloon. (OLS X-2-158 nO.I4) UCL: [I] [l972n-2 [1973n. and poetry supplement [I974n.

[1973]-[1974] The first issue's editorial declared: "The aim of this magazine is to publish the work of socialist poets. Contributions need not be directly political, but should reflect Marxist thought in some sphere." The poets included: Chris Searle, Norman Hidden, Kim Howells, Stan Trevor, Peter Langford, Andrew Salkey, David Craig, Keith Armstrong. Jamal Ali, Cecil Rajendra, and others. Kim Howells, later a minister in the Blair Government's Department ofCulrure, Media and Sport, includes two poems which anticipate the ministerial theme: "Open Your Eyes Fat Man Minister" and "The Minister's Goodbye."

88 Broadsheet I edited by Richard Downing; also with Chris Torrance, Andi Watchel and Bill Wyatt. Sutton and Bristol: Broadsheet, No. I (Nov. 1967)-4 (Sept 1970). ISSN: 0007-2044 Note: Continues: Assassinator Broadshttt. Continued by Srshtta. Related Imprint: BrQ,adsheet published Roger Yates, Tht Blind Chariotttr: potms (1968), BL: X.908/82149, and Bill Wyatt, Wind Blown Cloud Potms [1969], BL: X.908/83945 Contributors included: Paul Evans, Paul Green, Lee Harwood. Roger Yates, Bill Wyatt, Andrew Crozier, Dave

[138]

Chapter 0: 1960-1975 Cunliffe, Tina Morris, Peter Riley, and others. BL: I, 3-4. (P.905/22) CUL: 3-4. (L727.A.I) NLS: I, 3-4. (6.2094) TCD: OLS Papyrus Case 2 nO.1 UCL: I, 3-4 Poetry library: 3-4

89 Broadsheet / Hayden Murphy and Benedict Ryan. Dublin: [Broadsheet], No. I (Feb. 1968)- 26/30 (June 1978); [31?] [1983?] Note: No. 26/30 published by Martin, Brian & O'Keeffe, london Index: Indexed in Broadshtrt 1967-1978 (see below) Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish Littrary Magazinrs: an outlint history and drscriptiut bibliography (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2003), BL: 2725.g. 3414 Exhibition catalogue: Hayden Murphy (ed.), Broadshtrt 1967-1978: porny. prost and graphics (Edinburgh: National Library of Scotland, 1983), BL: X.950/22265: Hayden MUrphy. Broadshtrt Rttrosptctiut: introduction: making an tXhibitionfor myst!f(Edinburgh: [Hayden Murphy], 1985) A great variety of poetry from a magazine that. as its title implies, was seldom more than a single sheet. Contributors included: Dom Sylvester Houedard, Edwin Morgan, Norman MacCaig, Bob Cobbing, Michael Hartnett, Macdara Woods, Sara White, Marina Tsvataeva, Colm Toibin, Geoffrey Thurley, John Heath·Stubbs, Francis Stuan, Eithne Strong, lain Sinclair, James Simmons, Michea! 0 hUanachain, Desmond O'Grady, Eilean Ni ChUillean:l.in, John Montague, Sorley Maclean, Patricia McCarthy, Gerald Mangan, Derek Mahon, Tom leonard, Liz lochhead, Michael Longley, James Kirkup, Thomas IGnsella, Brenden Kennelly, P. J. Kavanagh, Michael liorovitz, John Hewitt, Hamish Henderson, Seamus lieaney, Peter Fallon, Paul Ourem, Thomas A. Clark, the editors, and others. AfTer the first issue Murphy edited the IlIagazine alone. BL: 3: 26/30. (P.2ooo/654.) N!.S: 1-26/3 0. (FB.eI.t06) TCD: 1-26/3°. (OLS Papyrus Case 2 no.l.) VCL: 3,4, 6-10. Poetry library: Ilr26/30 (incomplete), [31?].

90 Broadsheet / edited by W. J. Barnes. Orpington: Poetry Workshop, Society of Civil Service Authors, No. I (Jan. 1971)-6 (Jan. 1976) Note: Continued as: Focus and then as Waurs 8L: P.C}OI/3067

UCL: I-[3?] Poetry Library:

I

91 Broadsheet / edited by Gerard Fanning. Dublin: Poetry Workshop, University College Dublin, [No. I, 19747-?] Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish Littrary Magozinrs: an outlint history and drscriptiut bibliography (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2003), BL: 2725.g.3414 National Library ofIreland: NO.5 (1975). (LO LB 99)

92 Brooklyn Manuscript. Birmingham: Brooklyn College of Technology, C.1974 Mentioned in Must 5 as a student poetry magazine. No holdings known.

93 Bump. [Edinburgh University Student Publications Board], No. I [1972]-[no.7, 1976] The pages of the earlier issues were printed by typewritten stencil. Robert Garioch contributes a poem essentially dedicated to the magazine in the first issue, and contributors include Brian McCabe, Andrew Greig, Ronald Y. Butlin (i.e. Ron Butlin), Mario Relich, Maureen Sangster, and others. BL: 1-4, and an unnumbered issue. (P.523/332) NLS: HP3.80.269 PER

94 Byways / edited by Gerry Loose. Saffron Walden: Gerry Loose, NO.5 [1972?]-6? [197?] Note: Continues: Haiku Byways Related Imprint: Byways Press published at least one pamphlet, Thistlt Brilliant Morning: Shiki. Htkigodo, Santoka, Hosai [translations from the Japanese by William J. Higginson] [197?], BL: YA.1996.a.19834 Haiku and minimalist poetry, presented in an understated, white·space way. Contributors include Larry Butler, Michael McClintock, Christopher Gray Hulse, Virginia Baltzell, Virginia Brady Young, Larry Gates, Geraldine Little, James Evetts, Talcuboku Ishikawa, David Uoyd, M. Pace, and Cid Corman, whose ALanguagt Without Words takes up all of Byways no. 6. BL: 5. (ZD.9.a.6S). 6. (yA.2003·a·50300)

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 95 Canards du SiecIe Present 1edited by Anthony Barnett. Nivaa, Denmark: Anthony Barnett, 1970

CUL: 3-8. (L727.C.438) NLS: 3-8. (NH.578 PERl UCL: 1-1, 4-8.

A one-off, with contributions by a number of those associated with 'The Cambridge School' (though not exclusively so), e.g. Anthony Barnett, Andrew Crozier, Lee Harwood, John James, B. S. Johnson, Douglas Oliver, J. H. Prynne, Tom Raworth, Peter Riley, Nick Totton, and others.

98 Carcanet 1edited by Farrukh Dhondy and Diane Troy. Oxford: Carcanet, [1962]-[197°]. ISSN: 0008624J{

BL: X.902/1604 UCL

96 Candelabrum 1edited by Dale Gunthorp and M. L. McCarthy. London: Red Candle, VOl.l no. I (Apr. 1970)-. ISSN: 147cr8 493· Index: With last number of volume 1 Related Imprint: Red Candle Press published a number of anthologies as well as collections by authors particularly associated with Candtlabrum, e.g. R. L. Cook, Roy Harrison, M. L McCarthy, Helen Tudor Morgan, and others. Website: www.members.tripod.com/redcandlepress Longstanding magazine publishing just poetry (no reviews). The aesthetic is unexperimental. Contributors to the early issues included William Oxley, Doris Lessing, W. H. Auden, Peter Scupham, Jack Clemo, R. L. Cook, and others. BL: P.901/594 CUL: Vol. I no. 2-. (L727.C.562.) NLS: Vol. 1 no. 2-. (HI4.904 PERl TCD: VO!.I no. 1-\'01.4 nO.5/6 (1983) .(PER 71-785) UCL

97 Capella 1edited by Eamon Carr and Peter Fallon. Dublin: Tara Telephone, No. I (April 1969)-8 [1971] Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish Litrrary MalJazints: an outline history and descriptive bibliolJraphy (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 1003), BL: 1725·g· 3414 Related Imprint: Tara Telephone also published The Book of Invasions and a number of poetry collections, e.g. by Gerald Smyth and Brendan Kennelly. This poetry-only magazine makes connections across the Irish Sea, publishing Uverpool poets Adrian Henri, Roger McGough, and Brian Patten alongside the editors, Seamus Heaney, Brendan Kennelly, Eilean N{ Chuilleanain, and others. John Lennon contributes a line drawing to no. 3. BL: 1-3 (Dec. 1969); 5/6 (Apr. 1971]; 8. (ZA.9.a.l0836)

Interview: with Michael Schmidt, in Gllrtschacher I Related Imprint: Carcanet The magazine that would inspire the well-known poetry imprint. The main archive ofCarcanet is held at the lohn Rylands Library, Manchester University. Contributors include: Adil lussawalla, John Birtwhistle, Adi Katrak, Clive Wilmer, Peter lay, Clive lames, and others. BL: Ian. 1963; Winter 1966/67; Winter 1967/8; Spring 1969-Winter 1969/70; Summer 1970. (P.901/528.) CUL: 1961-197°. (CAM.B.41.39) NLS: Winter 1969/70; Summer 1970. (1974.1°7 PERl UCL: Winter 1966-Summer 1970

99 Caret: a poetry magazine 1edited by Robert Johnstone, Trevor McMahon and William Peskett. Belfast and Cambridge: [Caret], NO.1 (Autumn 1972)-8/9 (Spring/Summer 1975) Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish Literary MalJazints: an outline history and dtSCriptive bibliolJraphy (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 10°3), BL: 2715.g.3414 A publisher of several of the Northern Irish poets who would be prominent in the decades that followed, namely Michael Longley, Paul Muldoon, and Tom Paulin. Short stories and line drawings also featured. Others included Philip Hobsbaum, Elaine Feinstein, Stewart Conn, Michael Schmidt, C. H. Sisson, Douglas Dunn, Peter Porter, Gavin Ewart, and Val Warner. Robert lohnstone's last issue was no. 3; William Peskett continued until no. 7; the last issue, 8/9, was edited by Trevor McMahon alone. BL: P.901/946 CUL: L727.C.516 NLS: 01.8.167 PER TCD: PER 81-766 UCL

Chapter D: 1960-1975 100 Catacomb Poets / edited by Rev. Alastair Osborne. [Edinburgh]: [Catacomb Press], NO.1 [1972]-4 [1975]

103 Cerddi / [edited by] Gwilym Rees Hughes and Islwyn Jones [and others]. Llandysul: Gwasg Gomer, 1969-1975; 1977;

Poems mainly by students connected with New College, Edinburgh.

1979·

CUL: L727.d.I77.I NLS: P.med.I4S3 TCO: P2S783 UCL

BL: 1969--1977 (P.901/S3S)· 1979 (X·9s o /801 S) CUL: L733.C.37 NLS: 1969 (NG.lS2s.e.27)· 1970 (NG.IS2S·g·4S) TCO: 1969 (HL-74-420). 1970 (HL-74-42I ), 1971 (HL74-422),1972 (HL-74-423), 1973 (HL-74-424), 1974 (PL- 96-8S9), 1975 (PL- 96-860), 1977 (PL- 96--861), 1979 (PL- 96-862)

101 Centre 17/ edited by Stanley J. Thomas. [Waltham stow, then Thaxted]: Walthamstow Poetry Group, NO.1 (Summer 1971)-6 (1973) ·Centre 17 is a maguine loosely formed around the Walthamstow Poetty Group which meets during term time on the first Thursday of each month at 7. 30pm in the Green Room of the Walthamstow Adult Education Centre." Contributors include Gerda Mayer, George Cairncross, Geoffrey Holloway, Lawrence Upton, Steve Sneyd, and others. SL: 1-2. (P.90I/80S) CUL: 3-6. L727.C.604) NLS: 3,4, 6. (HP3-79.662 PER) UCL

Roughly annual volumes of contemporary poetty in Welsh.

104 Chapbook / edited by Arthur Argo. [Aberdeen: Waverley Press, Vol. 1 no. I, 1967?]-vol. 5 no. 3 [19 69] A magazine devoted to Scottish folk music, printing songs and reviewing records and performances. The crossover in Scotland between poets and other writers and the folk scene was significant and contributors include Hamish Henderson (songs, and articles, e.g. on William McGonagall), Carl McDougall, Stuart MacGregor, Matt McGinn, Sheila Douglas, Adam MCNaughton, Ewan McColl, Peggy Seeger, Duncan Williamson, Billy Connolly, and others.

102 Ceolfrith. Sunderland: Ceolfrith Press, No. I (1970)-? [198?]

BL: Vol. 2 nO.2-vol. S no. 3· (P·901 /239) CUL: Vol. 3-Yol. S no. 3· (409. 0 .87)

Index: A listing of Ceolfrith Press publications is given in

105 Chapman / edited by George Hardie and Walter Perrie, then Joy Hendry. Hamilton, then Edinburgh: The Chapman, NO.1 (1970)- .

CfO!fTith Pns.s: list of publications 1970-1978 [1978), SL: Ylhoos.a.3329 Related Imprint: Ceolfrith Press also published individual poetry collections. Sometimes regarded as a little magazine, but generally treated by libraries as a series of individual works and so catalogued individually. It is not always clear what number the item is so that libraries may have more in the series than is clear from the catalogue. Holdings are therefore not given here. Associated with the Ceolfrith Arts Centre, there ia often a focus on visual poets and artists who work with text, including Dom Sylvester Houtdard, John Furniva1, lobin Crozier, Bob Cobbing, Henri Chopin, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Layton lUng, and others. Ceolfrith was the name of the eighth-century Abbot ofJarrow. There are over seventy Publications in the series.

ISSN 0308-2695 Note: Variant title: Tht Chapman Index: Scottish Pomy Indo: vol. 4 (Edinburgh: Scottish Poetty Library, 1996) Profiled in: GOrtschacher 1 Interview: with Joy Hendry, in GOrtschacher 2 Related Imprint: Chapman has published a number of individual poetty collections, e.g. by George Gunn and Janet Paisley. Website: http://www.chapman-pub.co.uk/ A major Scottish literary review publishing articles, poems and short reviews. Most contemporary Scottish poets are featured. Issues often have a feature on a particular Scottish author or theme, e.g. on women's contribution to twentieth century culture (27-28 double issue), on Kenneth White (59), on lain Crichton Smith (71), on Ian Hamilton

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 Finlay (78-79) etc. Many of the covers have been illustrated by A1asdair Gray. Although founded by Hardie and Perrie,

Hendry has edited for the vast majority of its numbers. Bl: P.90I/945 CUl: l727.C.444 NLS: HJ4.449 PER TCO: PER 72-720 UCl

Chase: a quarterly review of new writing I edited by S. Newman, 1. W. Lawson 106

Edwards, and A. E. Dudley. Hednesford: Cannock Chase Literary Society. 1 (June 1963)-5(Nov. 1965). ISSN: 0577-5701 Bl: P.P.8oo3.1S. CUl: l727.C.313 UCl

Chesil: the magazine ofChesil Poets. Weymouth: Word and Action, NO.1

107

(1973)-6 (1975) The Chesil Poets were David Boadella, Elsa Corbluth, Chris Fassnidge, R. G. Gregory, and Jon Robbins, and this A4 mimeographed maguine published their work only. Issues 2 to 5 invoke pagan festivals or seasons, e.g. Midwinter Feast, Spring Sacrifice, etc., as the timing and theme of their work. BL: P.903/l68 CUl: l727.b.1l9 TCO: PER8I~31 UCl

The magazine of the Circle in the Square group, much later known as the Polygon Poets. No holdings known.

Circuit I edited by Stephen Heath, David Bieda and Robert Wistrich. Cambridge: Circuit Magazine, [No. I] (Summer 1965)-11 (1969). ISSN: 0578-3127 III

Related Work: A supplement of philosophical essays entitled Lan,gua,gt was issued by Circuit and Cambridge Opinion and numbered no. 1 (Summer 1969), Bl: P.983/I7. "We wish CIRCUIT to enable the student mind to escape from the imprisonment of the narrow compass of academic degree requirements." - from the editorial in no. I. A broad-ranging magazine, with an interest in many of the arts and with a certain philosophical outlook. Essayists included: Roger Scruton, Terry Eagleton, and Feliks Topolski; Peter Brook gives an interview on his opposition to the American war in Vietnam; J. G. Ballard contributes "Love and Napalm: Export USA" and Situationniste Manifesto Strasbourg publishes "How to Smash A System·. The magazine deliberately tried to keep the number of poets featured down to a low number, for more concentrated reading. Contributing poets included Pete Brown (who also contributed a piece on American Beats in Britain), Dick Davis, Simon Barnard, Gillian Barron, Spike Hawkins, Ted Milton, Brian Panen, Carlyle Reedy, Adrian Mitchell, Richard Holmes, and Maureen DuffY. Tall, thin format, professionally printed with collage-style graphic design in later issues. Bl: I-S (Winter 1968). (P.S23/3) CUl: I-S (Winter 1968). (l98S.B.I2S) UCl

108 Chicago. European Edition I edited by Al~ce Notley. Wivenhoe, Essex, [I, 1973?-3, 1974?]

112 City of Tears I edited by Chris Torrance. London: Origins Diversions, [I, 1963?]

BL: 2. (ZO.9.b.S2) UCl: 2 (19741-3 (1974)

UCl

109 Christian Poetry. London: Fellowship of Christian Writers, 1975-? Bl: 19n. (yA.I990.a.I2443)

110 Circle in the Square Broadsheet I edited by Bill Pickard. [Bristol: Circle in the Square, C.1966?] Note: Continued by: Pottry aftht eirelt in tht Sl(uart

Note: Continued by: Diary af an Assassin and Othtr Docummts

113 Civil Service Poetry I edited by Ernest Meadowcroft and Mabs Allen. Brentwood, then Walton-on-Naze: EMMA, [Issue I] (1968)-12 (1979)

,

Bl: P.901/4S3 CUl: l727.d.139 NlS: P.med.I283 PER TCO: PR 338 1969-1979 Poetry Library: 6

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2. The Owl. London Vol. 1 no. 1 (May 1919), front cover [by William Nicholson] . AIS7. BL: P.P.6018.oab.

3. The Scottish Chapbook, Montrose. Vol. 1 no. 3 (Oct. 1922). AI92. BL: P.P.6203·1.

4. Germinal, London. Vol. I no. 1 (July 1923), front cover by Ludovic-Rodo Pisarro. A78. BL: P.P.6or8.oac

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10. Seven , Taunton. [Vol. I] no. 1 (Summer 1938), front cover. A197. BL: P.P.S939.bep

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Kingdom Come, Oxford. Vol. 2 no. 3 (Spring 1941 ), front cover by Baptista Gilliat-Smith. AI02. BL: p.P.6n8.hk. 11.

12. Poetry London, London. No. 14 (Nov.-Dec. 1948) , front cover by Henry Moore. A173. BL: P.P.SI26.bbi

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13. The Glass, Lowestoft. No.6 (Spring 1951). Cover, by Arthur Phelps. B49. BL: P,P'5938.bde

14. Gairm: an raitheachan Gaidhlig, Glaschu [Glasgow). [No. Il (1952), front cover. C38. BL: P.P.8004.dh

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15. Delta: a literary review from Cambridge, Cambridge. No.2, front cover by James Fitton. C25. BL: P.P.5126.bcd

16. Agenda, London. Vol. 5 no. 1- 3 (1967). Front cover, drawing by David Jones. C2. BL: P.P·5Io9.aac

, ZOllo PROS winter

17. Prospect, Cambridge. [No·4] (Winter 1960), front cover. Cg4. BL: P.P·7 6I6 .pZ

18. And, London. NO.3 [Ig6?], title page. C4. BL: ZA·9· b . 2 °79 pp

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o 19. Poor. Old. Tired. Horse, Edinburgh. No. 18 [I966?], front cover: text by Ad Reinhardt, design by Bridget Riley. D38S . BL: Cup.SIo.cop.6

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20. Underdog: English poetry scene, Liverpool. No.8 (19 66 ), front cover: "Death of a bird in the city" by Adrian Henri. DS04. BL: P.P.800S.iu

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21. Soho: bi-lingual review, revue bilingue, London. NO.1 (19 64), front cover, by Nick Tidnam. 0451. BL: P.903/193 22. The English Intelligencer, London. ['Telegram' issue, 1967], front cover. 0153. BL: P.905/20

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tarasque number six 23. Second Aeon, Cardiff. No.6 [1968], front cover. 0434. BL: P.901/459

24. Tarasque, Nottingham. No.6, undated , fronteover. D473. BL: ZA·9· a . 8S8o

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25. The Honest U1sterman, Casderock. NO· 4 (Aug. 1968), front cover. D212. BL: P.801/433 lAJ

26. Modern Poetry in Translation, London , No.6 (1970), front cover. D28S. BL: ZD·9·a.122 P.901

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[1971] , front cover. D245·

28. Oasis, London. No. 12 (1974) , front cover, production and design by Ian Robinson and Ray Seaford. D318. BL: P·901/2096

q u rN 0)0\ I7 U

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29· Schmuck, Cullompton. NO,5 (1974). 0425 . BL: ZO·9· a . 62

30. Stereo Headphones: an occasional magazine of the new poetries, Kersey. NO.7 (1976), P.37: poem by Robert Lax, drawing by Emil Antonucci. 0460. BL: P·43I/IOO

aKros \lei 12 .... .

0 . - . . , 1177 ,,.....,,

long

~ms

bV :

JUM 8udenz

Tom Buchan Jan. Me Gomga( Scon Eden AoNkt Y. Buthn

~:: r~ CridJlon

Smith

A,.",....

31. Akros, Bishopbriggs [then other locations) . Vol. 36 (Oec. 1977), front cover. 012. BL: P·90I/1

12

no.

32. Ludd's Mill, Ossett. No. IS [I979?) , front cover. D260. BL: P.903/no

Chapter D: 1960-1975 114 Cleft: a university quarterly I edited by B. [i.e. Bill] McArthur. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University, 1 (June 1963)-2 (May 1964). ISSN 0529-9330

II7 Collection I edited by Peter Riley. Hove, Sussex, then Odense, Denmark: Collection, 1 (Mar. 1968)-7 (Autumn 1970). ISSN: 05 2 9-933 0

Includes work by Henry Miller, William Burroughs, Michael McClure, Anselm Hollo, Norman Mailer, Gary Snyder, Andrei Vosnesensky, Jonathan Williams, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Louis Zukotksy, and others.

Note: Collection 4 (April 1969) is a co-publication with Tzarad 3 and Collection 6 is a co-publication with Tzarad 4 with the individual title The AU9ust AU9ust: a special seaside bucket-andspade issue. Five supplements to Collection 7 were issued in a limited edition of perhaps forty copies, including work by Mark Hyatt, Fred Buck, Michael Haslam, and Donald Haworth. Haworth's Ambivalent Propasanda (1971), BL: YA.1997.b.4059, was a further, unnumbered, supplement to the magazine.

BL: P.P.Bo03·jy NLS: 5.3017 UCL

115

Clump.

[1974]

Describing itself as "not a school magazine" but giving no publication details. King's College London, Eric Mottram Archive: 7/148/1 (1974)

IIsa Cog Broadsheet I [edited by Toni Savage?]. Leicester: [Cog Press], No. I (1973)-22 (1975) Note: Continued by: Barwell Broadsidts Study: Derek Deadman and Rigby Graham, APaper Snowstorm: Toni Savase & The Ltictster BroadshetlS (Oldham: Incline Press, 2005). This book also tips in many examples of broadsheets and other printing, and comes with a portfolio of further examples. Related Imprint: Cog Press published a number of poetry and art-related books, including the Maltese poet Victor Fenech's London Pirturts, and other poems (1976), BL: CUP·510.cod.lo For distribution at the Ampersand Folk Club, Barwell. No holdings known.

u6 Collection I [edited by Eric Ratcliffe]. Whitton: Whitton Poetry Group, NO.1 (June 1962)-2 (Feb. 1963) Note: Continued by ExprtsSion Interview: with Eric Ratcliffe, in Gortschacher 2 Contributors included Eric Ratcliffe, Brian Louis Pearce, and one of the first appearances ofwork by Penelope Shuttle, described as a "Staines schoolgirl".

Among the contributors to the magazine were: Andrew Crozier, Lee Harwood, John James, Tim Longville, Chris Torrance, David Chaloner, Barry MacSweeney, Stephen Rodefer, Fred Buck, Wendy Mulford, J. H. Prynne, Douglas Oliver, Tom Raworth, Paul Evans, Ian Patterson, Thomas A. Clark, and others. NO.4 included, in the Tzarad section, translations of Tristan Tzara, Pierre Reverdy, Blaise Cendrars, Apollinaire, Hugo Ball, Rene Magritte, Michel Couturier, Max Jacob, and Philippe Soupault, as well as, in the Collection section, a translation of a Francis Ponge piece. There was also work from Robin Blaser, Jack Spicer, Charles Olson, Ron Padgett, Tom Clark, Anne Waldman, John Wieners, and Frank O'Hara. Peter Riley also posted out works not necessarily connected to Collection, such as Fred Buck's The Hair on the Face lifthe DoS Moon issued at about the same time as Collection 7. The last issue was coedited with John James. Essentially a "Cambridge School" magazine. BL: 1-4, 6-7· (P.903/46.) CUL: L727.B.8o NLS: 6.21I0 PER TCD: 1-2. (PER9o-n 1968) UCL: Lacking nos. 5-6 Poetry Library: Lacking nos. 5-6.

u8 Collection. Huddersfield: Straight Enterprises,1 [1973]-3 [1974] Each issue comprised the poetry and fiction of a single author. In order of appearance: Alex Kernaghan, Andrew Darlington, and David Ward. BL: P.903/201 UCL: 1 only

BL: 11397·bb.2 CUL: L727·C·3Io NLS: 5.3074 PER

[143]

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 119 Concept Poetry I edited by David Rees; then David Black, David Hamilton, Marigold Popplewell and others. Whipsnade: Concept, NO.1 (1970)-6 [1972]

and Aztec poems.

Free verse by Sebastian Horn, David Rees, David J. Black (and also David Black, presumably the same person), Steven Douglas, Maria Harper, Peter Orla-Bardzki, Richard Plewes, Roger McGough, and others.

124 Corridor. Manchester, Vol. I (1971)-5 (1975)

BL: 1 and a further unnumbered issue. (ZA.9.a.u451) CUL: L727.C.754 NLS: 1976.245 PER TCD: Lacking 2. (PER 81-945 ) UCL: Lacking 2 Poetry Library: 3-4.

BL: 1-7, 9. (P·901 /544) CUL: 6. (Lg99.C.3.822.) UCL

Note: Continued by: Wordworks A 'vehicle for new and experimental writings'. CUL: May 1971-June 1971. (L999.B.1.179) UCL

120 Concern (Faroes). I (1960)

125 Cosmos I edited by Steve MacDonogh and Michael Gray. York: Cosmos, I (Sept. 1969)-4 (August 1972)

CUL: Lg99.C.3.I45

Contributors include Michael Horovitz and JeffNuttaII.

121 Context I edited by James F. Porter. Westgate-on-Sea, Kent, [c. 1970] Winter 1970 issue noted in Htadland 8. No holdings known.

BL: I. (P.901/474) CUL: L727.C.465 NLS: 5-4958 PER TCD: PER 90-57 1969-1972 UCL: 1-3 Poetry Library: 1

122 Continuum I edited by Gray Austerberry, then Brendan Cronin and Rick Lyon. Lancaster: Bowland College, University of Lancaster, No. I [1966]-7 (1970)?

126 Crab Grass: poetical sonatas I edited by John Gilbert and Marcus Patton. Belfast: [No. I, 1969-5?, 1972?]

BL: P.gol/u6 CUL: LgOO.C.427 NLS: 5.5761 PER TCD: PER 81-584 UCL

Note: No.2 included The Crabgrass Music Dropout: a suppltmmt of avant-garde music. Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish Literary Magazines: an outline history and descriptive bibliography (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2003), BL: 2725.g.3414

123 Contrasts: a magazine of new poetry I edited by Russell Pemberton. New Milton, Liverpool: Russell Pemberton, No. I (1970)-9 (1972) Eclectic range of contemporary poems and reviews and short unusual articles, e.g. on the historical context for tonal and atonal music, an appraisal of minor Elizabethan poetJ, on the medievalism of William Morris and Rudyard Kipling, on F. R. leavis, on the science fiction author Ray Bradbury, and other topics. Bob Cobbing's visual (and other) poetry could as weU appear as work by Barry MacSweeney, Brian Parten, Robin Fulton, Nina Steane, David Chaloner, Adrian Henri, and many others; translation. included renderings of French, Greek, Dutch

Sound, visual and found poetry from: Abraham KlaxWilliams, Spencer Megahey, Charles Patton, Marcus Patton, Philip Jenkins, Roger Armstrong, Nancy Noble, Henry Tonk, Peter Fallon, and others. BL: [1]- 2 [1970]. (P.901/587.) Queen's University Belfast: [1-5]. (hAP4.C9)

127 The Curiously Strong I edited by Fred Buck, then Ian Patterson. Cambridge: Fred Buck, Vol. I no. I (Feb. 24, 1969)-vol. 4 nos. 9/10 (1975). tsSN: 001I-3077 Related imprint: Curiously Strong Note: Vol. 3 no. 8 was not published because two issues were numbered vol. 3 no. 7, Elaine Randell'. Songs of

Chapter D: 1960-1975 HtSpms and Peter Riley's Five Stts. However, some copies of the latter were renumbered by hand. Vol. 4 no. 8 appears not to have been published either.

A classic "Cambridge School" magazine. Contributors include: Barry MacSweeney, Peter Riley, Jim Bums, Thomas A. Clark, Paul Evans, David Chaloner, Elaine Feinstein, John James, Wendy Mulford, Paul Green, Paul Wheeler, J. H. Prynne, Nick Totton, Peter Ackroyd, Andrew Crozier, Elaine Randell, and others. The last issue included contributions by Anthony Barnett, Allen Fisher, Roy Fisher, Lee Harwood, Michael Horovitz, Michael Haslam, Pierre Joris, Tim Longville, Matthew Mead, Jeff Nuttall, Douglas Oliver, Peter Philpott, John Seed, Ian Sinclair, Chris Torrance, David Tipton, and John Welch, as well as several of the magazine's regulars. BL: Vol. I no. I-VOl. 3 no. 7, vol. 3 no. 9-10, vol. 4 no. I-no. 3{4, no. 6--96I Poetry Library

[260]

Chapter E: 1976-2000 284 The Fly Cemetery I edited by C. Heasman and L. Accola. Southsea, No. I (1981) UCl:

I

285 Focus I Stockport: Society of Civil Service Authors Poetry Workshop, 1977-1997. ISSN: 0140-0878 Note: Continues: Broadshert. Continued by: Wavt5 Bl: P.901/3067

286 Focus I edited by Robert Holdstock, Chris Evans, Chris Bailey, Allan Sutherland and Dave Swindon. Reading, [1979?-?] Recorded by the UK Little Magazines Project. No holdings known.

Foldan Sceatas See Folded Sheets E287

Folded Sheets: of what new poetry is posted here I edited by Michael 287

Haslam. Hebden Bridge: Open Township, No. 1 (Sept. 1986)-8 (Dec. 1990). ISSN: 095D-284X Note: Variant title: Faldan Sctatas Related Imprint: Open Township Contributors included: Neil Oram, Chris Torrance, D. S. Marriott, Joseph Guglielmi (trans. Mark Callan), Rod Mengham, Paul Matthews, Catherine Byron, Peter Riley, Peter Sansom, Ken Edwards, Ian Pople, John Welch, Peter Hughes, Peter Finch, James Keery, Kelvin Corcoran, Michael Ayres, Willem Roggemann (trans. Thea Hermans), Peter Robinson, Ralph Hawkins, David Miller, David Chaloner, Billy Mills, Jay Ramsay, Anna Taylor, Jenny Chalmers, John Wilkinson, Andrew Lawson, Tom Phillips, Yann Lovelock, Nigel Wheale, Nicholas Johnson, Rupert Loydell, Keith Jebb, the editor himself, and others. Martin Thorn joined Michael Haslam to co-edit issues 7 and 8. Bl: ZC.9·3.I96S CUl: 1-7. (l727·c.I070) NLS: I. (DJ.S.247 PER) TCD: 1-7. (PER91-4S8) UCl Poetry Library: 6

288 Folio I edited by Tom Bingham. Corby: Tom Bingham, NO.1 (1983)-13 (1987). ISSN: 0266-0016 Note: Variant title: Folio fntmational Related Imprint: Folio International published several collections, including Des Carroll's R~tctionsfram a Ctll (1986), Bl: YC.1988.a.6286) An AS stapled format. Contributors include: Tim Love, Robert [i.e. Rob) Mackenzie, Maureen MacNaughtan. Dave Cunliffe, Steve Sneyd, Johan de Wit, Josephine Austin, Raymond Tong, David Grubb, Frederic Vanson, Gerald England, Ivor C. Treby, Rupert Loydell, and others. BL: 1-7; 9-13. (P.90I/3S3S) CUl: 7-13. (L727.C.1234) NLS: 7-13. (OJ.s.682(2) PER) UCL: 12-13 Poetry Library: 2; 4; 11-13

Folio International See Folio E288 289 The Fool/ edited by David Baxter, Newcasde-upon-Tyne, No. I (1979)-[2?, I98-?] No. [2?] is entitled "The Apocalypse issue - a sacred civilization." CUl: 1999.b.1.760 TCD: PER 92-568 UCl: I Poetry Library: [2?)

290 Fool's House I edited by Allen Fisher. London: Spanner, [No. I] (1980) Related Imprint: Spanner also published Spanntr "Work from 14 London-based poets not invited to the PeL [Polytechnic of Central London) Politics & Poetry Conference June 1980." Perhaps more of an anthology than a magazine. Bl: X.9S5M80 CUl: 1990.11.210 Poetry Library

291 Foolscap / edited by Judi Benson. London, NO.1 (1987)-17 (1995). ISSN: 095 2-3979 Judi Benson co-edited with Ken Smith, Klaonica: Potrnsfor Bosnia (Bloodaxe, 1993, BL: YK.1993.3.I7288). Her own col-

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 lections include Call It Blue (2000) and In the Pockets of StrangtTS (1993), both from Rockingham Press. BL: ZC.9.a.u95 CUL: L727.b.361 NLS: HP.la.1801 PER TCD: PER 95-5321987-1995 UCL:3-17 Poetry Library: 3-5; 7-17

292 Footnotes I edited by James Sale, Malcolm Povery and Richard Marriott. Colden Common, near Winchester: The Schools' Poetry Association. No. I [1986]-3 [1987] CUL: L999.b.I.14r8NLS: DJ.m.384(r) PER TCD: 2. (PER9o-g64) Poetry Library: r-2

Force 10 in Mayo: a journal of the northwest I edited by Dermot Healy. Co.

293

Mayo, No. I (I989)-n (1999)

295 Forty Winks. Redcar: Nibs Publishing Association, [NO.1, 1996]-? ISSN 1365-5914 Note: Continued by Paperwtight BL: ZK.9.b.10350

296 The Four Elements. [Cheltenham]: Friends of the Cheltenham Festival of Literature,1989-?· An annual fine press production, printed at the Whittington Press.

BL: 1989-1991 (HS.74178r)

297 [Four Word Magazine] 4word Magazine. Rhondda: Rhondda Community

Arts, Issue I [1995]-7 (1996). ISSN 1360-4481 BL: ZK.9.a.4289 CUL: L727.C.I255 NLS: HJ4.1663 PER TCD: PER 88-321 1995-1997 Poetry Library: I; 3-6

Note: Known simply as Force 10 Contributors include: Seamus Heaney, Pat McCabe, Paul Durcan, John McGahern, John B. Keane, Maedbh McGuckian, Neil Jordan and others. Dermot Healy was a writer in residence at Mayo, and worked on Force 10 as part of that task, with a wider-distributed but unnumbered issue appearing in 1991 after several smaller issues before (and after) that date. BL: 1991. (YK.1993.b.8u5) CUL: 1991. (488.b.136) NLS: 1991. (HP4.93.124) TCD: 1991. (PER 91-9371991) Queen's University Belfast, Special Collections: 1-3; 5-II. (h q PR8700 .F6)

.

294 Forever: poetry and prose I edited by Michael O'Neill. Didsbury, Manchester: Forever Publications, No. I (1976)-7/8 (1978). ISSN: 0140-3141 BL: P.90I/3065 CUL: L727.C.661 NLS: DJ.&.436 PER TCD: PER 94-307 1976-1978 UCL Poetry Library: 2; 5

Fragmente: a magazine of contemporary poetics I edited by Andrew

298

Lawson and Anthony MeIIors. Oxford, No. I (Spring 1990)-. ISSN: 0960-0450 Poems, reviews, and essays, with contributors including Tom Raworth, Kelvin Corcoran, Alan Halsey, Nigel Wheale, Ken Edwards, John Wilkinson, Peter Middleton, Simon Smith, Gilbert Adair, Charles Bernstein, David Bromige, Peter Finch, Lyn Hejinian, Karen Mac Cormack, Steve McCaffery, Michael Palmer, Marjorie Perloff, Rosmarie Waldrop, Peter Riley, Tony Baker, Harry Gilonis, Geraldine Monk, Bill Griffiths, John Welch, Peter Larkin, Nicholas Johnson, Richard Caddel, and others. No.8 was guestedited by D.S. Marriott and Vicky Lebeau. BL: 1-3. (ZC.9·a.2606) CUL: L727.C.Il57 NLS: HJ4.1323 PER TCD: PER 95-21 UCL:I-6 Poetry Library: I; 4-8

299 Frames /edited by John Edward Gimblett and Dawn Mears. Bettws: No. I (1984)-6 (1987). ISSN: 0265-6396 CUL: 2-4. (L718.c.823)

Chapter E: 1976-2000 NLS: 2-? (DJ.S.253(2) PER) UCL Poetry Library

303 Frontal Lobe I edited by Robert T. Miller. Huddersfield: Organism, Issue I [1994] ISSN: 1357-0404

300 Free Hand I edited by Jo Wood. West Kirby: FootPrints, [No. I, 1998?J-7 ISSN: 14 63-00 44

Poems, collage. short fiction, listings of magazines and bookshops. This magazine had a music fanzine-like look and tone, with the music editor listed as "Fulvolume". Poets included Steve Sneyd, Dave Cunliffe, and Alistair Paterson.

BL: Dec. 1998. (ZK.9.b.13784)

301 Freestyle Magazine I edited by Patrick Hopewell. Bristol: Freestyle Writers' Group, No. I [19947] Poetry Library: 1

302 The Frogmore Papers I edited by Jeremy Page. Folkestone: The Frogmore Press, NO.1 (1983)-. ISSN: 0956-0106 Note: A supplement, Fro!jmort North, ed. Jonathan Hall, was published in 1986 Interview: with Jeremy Page, in Portry Nrws: tht Ntwslrtter of tht Portry Socitty, Spring 2004, p.8 Related Imprint: Frogmore Press has published a number of anthologies and single-author collections, including those by Giles Goodland, Matthew Mead, Marita Over, and Brian AJdiss Website: www.frogmorepress.co.uk From the website (Nov. 2004): "Writers who have appeared in their pages include Tobias Hill, Sophie Hannah, Linda France, John Mole, Elizabeth Garren, Susan Wicks, John Whitworth, Elizabeth Bartlen, Brian A1diss, Geoffrey Holloway, Carole Satyamurti, James Brockway, Marita Over, Paul Groves, Mario Petrucci, Caroline Price, Matthew Mead, Tamar Yoseloff, Myra Schneider, Andrew Waterhouse, John Harvey, Pauline Stainer, Ian Caws, Mike Jenkins, Judi Benson, Jane Holland, Ian Parks, Christine McNeil, Derek Sellen, Ros Barber, Patty Scholten, Merryn Williams and many more ... " The magazine began as a stapled A4 format, without a card cover, but changed 00 AS with a slighdy more robust cover with issue 19, production values improving further in later issues. A poetry competition is associated with the magazine. SL: ZC·9·b·3573 CUL: 19-. (L7 27· d·3 I1 ) NLS: 19-. (HP.sm.874 SERJ TCD: 19-. (PER 85-377) UCL: 55-· Poetry Library: 1 Tanikawa; from Italy, Valerio Magrelli, from Germany, Paul Celan (translated by Michael Hamburger), and others. BL: 3 (Summer 1997), 4 (Summer 1998),5 ("vol. 3"), 6 ("vol 4."). (ZC.9.a.6296) Poetry Library: 3 (1997)-?

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 695 Rhinoceros. Belfast, No. I [1989]-5 [1992]

Wetherby: Dark Diamonds, No. I [1990]-6 (199 6)

BL: 5. (ZC·9· a ·3 233) CUL: 1-4. (L727.C.1l24) NLS: 1-4. (D).s.274 PER) UCL:2-S Poetry Library

Related Imprint: Dark Diamonds also published several short works by Andrew Cocker

696 The Rialto I edited by Michael Mackmin, Jenny Roberts and John Wakeman. Norwich: The Rialto, No. I (Autumn 1984)-. ISSN: 0268-5981 Website: www.therialto.co.uk/ Interview: with Michael Mackmin and John Wakeman in GOrtschacher 2; with Michael Mackmin in Portry News: the Nrwslrttrr ofthe Portry Socirty, Summer 2001, p.8 Related Imprint: The Rialto publish poetry collections, e.g. Andrew Waterhouse's In (2000), BL: YK.2ooo.a.792o Began with an East Anglian focus, with a link to Samphirr via Jenny Roberts (the daughter of Sam ph ire's Kemble Williams), but publishes poetry from much further afield. BL: P.903/1068 CUL: L7:1.7.b.277 NLS: HJ9.239 SER UCL Poetry Library

697 The Richmond Writer: prose and poetry from the Richmond Writers' Circle. London: Richmond Writers' Circle, No. I [1997]-10 (1998) Website: www.richmondwriterscircle.org.uk/ Anthology: Circle Lints (2004) Poetry Library: 10

698 RiffRaff Poets I edited by Jeff Cloves, Pat van Twest and Derrick Gould. St. Albans, Bristol and London: Freedom Press, No. I (1982)-5 (199°) SL: 1-3. (ZK.9.b.698) Poetry Library: I, 5

A Riot of Emotions: vagabonds on the road oflife: art poetry prose reviews & more I edited by Andrew Cocker. 699

SL: ZK.9.a.2519 CUL: Lgoo.d.Il6 NLS: HP.med.1008 PER TCD: 4-6. (PER96-47) Poetry Library: 2

700 Rising I edited by Tim Wells. London, No. I [1995]- . Note: Variant titles: Bad Moon Risin9, Suzie Q Risin9, Whole Lotta Risin9, etc Interview: With Tim Wells by Cheryl B. [i.e. Burke] at www.cherylb.comllnstigation-2.htm A magazine with an emphasis on Performance poetry, though not exclusively so. Contributors include Clare Pollard, Salena Saliva, Yen Li, John Stammers, Roddy Lumsden, and others. UCL: 8; Il-15; 17-. Poetry Library: 3 [19967]; 6-

701 The Riverside Poetry Review I edited by Gerard Thomas and Anjan Saha. London: Sundial Press, Vol. I no. I-no. 2 (1998) Associated with Riverside Studios (London). Poetry Library

702 Rivet I edited by Eve Catchpole, Sue Cooper, Helen Marcus, Maggie Prince, Rosina Sargent, Roy Shepard, Sue Smith, Vicki Vickers, Lindsay Warden. Frieth, near High Wycombe: The Writers' Workshop, Vol. I no. I [1995]-no. 2. [1995]. ISSN: 1354-75 18 In the second issue, Helen Marcus and Sue Cooper were the only editors SL: ZC.9.b.6010 Poetry Library: Vol. 1 no. 1

703 Roads: words I edited by David Mitchell and Gordon Smith. Leeds: David Mitchell, No. I [1988]-4 (1990). ISSN: 0954-7 827

Chapter E: SL: ZC.9.a.1898 CUL: L727.C.961 NLS: HP.sm.930 PER TCD: 3-4. (PR 15225 NO.1-No.2) Poetry Library: 2: 4

704 Rock Drill 1edited by Penelope Bailey and Robert Sheppard. Norwich, then Southwick, then Southsea: Supranormal Cassettes, No. I (1980)-5 [1985]. ISSN: 0144-7262 Profiled in: Robert Sheppard's biographical note at www.soton.ac.uk/ffibepc/poets/Sheppard.htm Contributors include Alan Halsey, Peter Robinson, Harry Guest, Yann Lovelock, Ric Caddel, Allen Fisher, Lee HaIWood, Elaine Randell, Ken Edwards, Kelvin Corcoran, Graham Sykes, John Muckle, John Ash, John Welch, Maggie O'Sullivan, Wendy Mulford, Ian Robinson, David Miller, and others. SL: P.903/668 CUL: 1-3: 5. (L7 2 7· b . 274) NLS: 1-3: 5. (DJ.m.26(1) PER) UCL Poetry Library

705 Route 1edited by Andy Campbell and others. Glasshoughton, then Pontefract: Route, Issue I [199?]--g (2001) Website: www.route-online.com/ Related Imprint: Route From the website: "Route is a culrural organisation and a home for contemporary story telling and ideas. Route runs a paperback publishing programme of fiction and performance poetry and this is supported by Route-online, which presents byte back books for download, performance recordings and an online gallery, as well as news, views and

I976-2000

707 The Rue Bella 1edited by Nigel Bird and Geoff Bird. London and Hebden Bridge, then Edinburgh, then Macclesfield, Vol. I [1998]-6 (2001) Note: Later volumes have ISSNs, with individual tides,

Saving tht Snow, Dearth ~tht Cool, Blut Ruin, etc. CUL: 1-4. (L727.C.1402) Poetry Library: 1-6 (20or)

708 Rusk. [UK], [No. I?] (1992)-[nO. 3?, 199 2?] Poetry Library: [1?-3?]

709 Rustic Rub 1edited by Jay Woodman. Selby: Woodman's Press, NO.1 [1993?]-10 (1999) ISSN: 1352-0997 Related Imprint: Woodman's Press also published And

What ofTomorrow? as well as a small variety of poetry, prose, biography and local history publications SL: ZK.9.a.3074 CUL: L727.d.315 NLS: HP.med.u65 PER TCD: PER 85-423 UCL Poetry Library

710 RWC 1edited by Lawrence Upton. Sutton: Lawrence Upton, NO.1 (Dec. 1990)-? Contributors include Robert Sheppard, Carlyle Reedy, Ken Edwards, Adrian Clarke, Patricia Farrell, Gavin Selerie, Ulli Freer, Virginia Firnberg, Paul Dutton, and others. Lawrence Upton also produced RWC Bullttin and RWC Extra, providing statements and context for the poetry published by RWC. SL: 1-12: 17-21/22: 27: 28 [1995]

fearures." Poetry Library: 9 (200l)

7 06 R.S.V.P. 1edited by Steve Davies and Paul Harrison. Keighley: Harrison Davies Press, Vol. I no. I [198?]-no. 2 (19 8 7) Poetry Library: Vol.

I

no. 2.

7II The Salmon 1edited by M.G. Allen, Micheal () Riada, Jessie Lendennie, Luke Geoghegan, Mary Dempsey, Seamas McAndrew, and Maire Holmes. Annaghdown, Galway: Salmon Publishing, NO.3 (19 82 )-24/ 2 5 (Winter 1990). ISSN: °79°-1631 Note: Continues: Portrlj Galway Profiled in: Tom Clyde,lrish Literary Magazints: an outline and descriptive bibliography (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2003), SL: 2725.g.3414 Interview: Jessie Lendennie, in Portrlj News: the Ntwsletter of

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 the Portry Socidy, Winter 2001/02, P.4 Website: www.salmonpoeay.com/index.html Related Imprint: Salmon Publishing, which grew out of the magazine (later basing itselfin County Clare), publishes many poeay collections

Salvo: an anthology of prose and verse. Birmingham: Cannon Hill Writers' 714

Group, [198?]Website: www.writers-circles.com/cannonhill.html

BL: II; 12; 14; 15; 16, 22. (P.901/3704) CUL: 5-23. (L7oo.d.26) NLS: 5-23. (DJ.s.657 PER) TCD: 3-21. (PER 91-659) UCL: 17-24/5 Poeay Library: 5-16; 18-24/25

715

Salopeot: the quarterly magazine of the Salopian Poetry Society / edited

Note: Continues Anomie Short stories and poems.

712

by Stephen Yapp, Allister Fraser and Violet Yapp. Telford: The Salopian Poetry Society, I (1976)- . Note: Some issues include loosely inserted sheets of comments ('Snippets'), edited by Violet Yapp. Poeay Library: 41; 49-50; 52-79; 81-86; 88--iJ5; 97-

Salt: an international journal of poetry and poetics I edited by John

713

Kinsella. Applecross (Australia) and Cambridge: Salt Publishing, No. I (1990)- . ISSN: 1324-7131 Note: No. I-II published solely in Australia. Later issues are referred to by vol. numbers, e.g. vol. 12. Index: A contents list for each issue is given on the Salt website Website: www.saltpublishing.com Related Imprint: Salt, which grew out of the magazine and the Folio (Salt) series of chapbooks, has become a significant publisher of collections by Australian, American and English poets, particularly of the avant·garde, including John James, Tony Lopez, Peter Robinson, and John Wilkinson, Charles Bernstein, Maxine Chernoff, Forrest Gander, Peter Gizzi, Paul Hoover, Ron Silliman, and Susan Wheeler, and Pam Brown, Jill Jones, Kate Lilley, Peter Rose, Tom Shapcott, and John Tranter. It also publishes literary criticism. BL: 12. (ZK.9.a.7832) CUL: 10. (L727.c.1435) TCD: 12 (PER 74-200) UCL:8 Poeay Library: 8-

Samizdat: the uen English Literature Society journal. [Dublin]: English Literature Society, University College Dublin, [1998?]-

BL: 1998; 2001/02. (ZK.9.b.II350)

716 Samizdat I edited by Joseph Piercy, with associate editors Nathaniel Mathews (Poetry) and Daniel Spicer (Short Fiction). Hassocks, West Sussex, then Brighton, Vol. I [1999]-4 [2002]. ISSN: 1472-8192 Note: Continued by Lun9, a magazine publishing beyond the period of this bibliography Website: www.samizdatonline.com/ BL: 2; 4. (ZK·9·a.7509)

717 Saturday Morning / edited by cris cheek and Simon Pettet London, I (1976)-5/6 (1978) Contributors include Colin Simms, Andrew Crozier, Antony [i.e. Tony] Lopez, and others. The last number was a New York issue with work by John Cage, Ted Berrigan, Kathy Acker, Allen Ginsberg, Alice Notley, Anne Waldman, Peter Orlovsky, John Giorno, and Dick Higgins. George Oppen is interviewed in no. 3. BL: 3. (ZA.g.a.u790) UCL

Scartch See Scratch E720 718

Scintilla / edited by Peter Thomas, with

Anne Cluysenaar, Donald Dickson, Graham

Hartill, Hilary Llewellyn-Williams, Angela Morton and Alan Rudrum. Usk: The Usk Valley Vaughan Association, I (1997)-. ISSN: 13 68-5 02 3

Chapter E: 1976-2000 Index: A contents listing of each issue is given on the Scintilla website Website: www.cf.ac.uk/encap/scintilla/index.html From the website, June 2005: "Scintilla is an annual journal devoted to literature written, and inspired, by the Breconshire writers Henry and Thomas Vaughan. Each volume includes poetry, prose fiction, drama, and essays, which explore themes relevant to the Vaughans, in modern (if not necessarily fashionable) terms. Scintilla is published by the Usk Valley Vaughan Association (UVVA), founded in the tercentenary year of Henry Vaughan's death, 23 April 1695: with financial support from the Arts Council of Wales and CardiffUniversity. The UVVA exists to explore, celebrate, and question the works and lives of Henry Vaughan, poet and doctor, and his twin brother, the famous alchemist Thomas Vaughan, while encouraging the work of modern writers and artists. " BL: ZC.9.a.5060 CUL: L727.c.1324 NLS: HJ3.1467 SER TCO: PER 101-825 Poetry Library

Scottish Poetry Library Newsletter I edited by Duncan Glen, and

719

others. Edinburgh, No. 1(1984)-. ISSN: 09 60-0477 Note: Variant title: SPlASH BL: ZC.9.b.4376 CUL: 1-7: 9- . (Periodicals Dept.) NLS: HP.la.956 PER TCO: 1-7: 9-29. (PER 95-661) UCL: 13 Poetry Library: l--g: 16-25: 27-

7 20 Scratch I edited by Mark Robinson. York, then Eaglescliffe, Issue I (1989)-17 (1997). ISSN: 095 8- 245 2 Note: The cover title ofissue 17 is given as Scartch. Individual issues could have their own titles, e.g. 8, Untitled Continmt: 9, Exciting Pomy!; 10, Upwards and Onwards: H, anly If Absolutely N«essary: 15, Sayings I!fthrLumpyJaw: 16, Invisible Spin Doctors: 17, The Final Straw BL: I-IS: 17. (ZC·9· a . 277 6) CUL: 1-10. (L727·C.1414) NLS: 1-10. (OJ.S.596(2) PER)

UCl Poetry Library

7 21 Scratchings: poems and prose I edited by Colin Donati, Ian Morrison, Donald Paterson, Stuart R. Pryde, Sheina ltigg, Alison Smith, Alison Lumsden, David Cameron, Janice McLeod, Kate Macdonald, lain MacDonald, Mark Willhardt, and lain S. MacDonald. Aberdeen: Aberdeen University Creative Writing Group, English Department, University of Aberdeen, NO.1 (1981)-? Note: Variant title: More Scratchings. NLS: 2-? (HP.sm.491) Aberdeen University: 1-5: 1993. (L Per Aa P98 S) Poetry Library: 2 -7

722 Screever I edited by Ken Singleton, with Andy Dutton and Linda Nixon. Stoke-on-Trent, NO.1 (1978)-3 [1983]. ISSN: 0264-0805 Associated with the University of Keele, from where it was produced, although the editorial address was changed with a sticker to Ken Singleton's address in 1Wickenham, perhaps to sell back issues after the closure of the magazine. Contributors included Fleur Adcock, Joseph Brodsky, lain Crichton Smith, C. H. Sisson, Richard Godden, Owen Davis, Jon Silkin, Wes Magee, Tom Paulin, Anne Stevenson, Thorn Gunn, and others. 8L: P.90I/3390 CUL: 1999.C.3.968 NLS: P.med.4313 PER UCL Poetry Libraty: I

Scribblers of Dubious Editorial Merit I edited by Tom O'Brien and Arnold

723

Moser. London, NO.1 (1992)-7 (1994) Note: Variant titles: SODEM: SODS: The Publication for Sods with Soul Poetry Library

724 Scrievans. Aberdeen: Robert Gordons English Department, Dec. 1979 Aberdeen University: L Per Aa N6 Rob s

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 725 Scrievins I edited by Peter Davidson, Alastair Wood, John Brewster, George Erskine, William Hershaw, Tom Hubbard, Margaret Wood, and Sheila Stephen. Markinch, then Glenrothes, then Dundee: Fife Writers' Group, NO.1 (1985)-9 (1992) Note: Very occasional, several years between some issues. No.8 includes a loosely inserted booklet, Bass Rock Song Book. NLS: DJ.m.Il23 PER Poetry Library: 8-g

Scriptor: a collection of new short stories, poetry and essays from the South-East region I edited by John

726

Dench and Lesley Dench. Whitstable: The Providence Press, Vol. 1 (1997)-? BL: 1-4. (ZK.9.a.4979) CUL: 1-2. (L727.C.1336) NLS: 1-2. (HJ3.1476 PER) TCD: 1-2. (PR20289) Poetry Library: 1-2

7 27 Sea Legs I edited by Paul Gogarty and Susanna Abse. London: Sea Legs, No. I (June 19 8 3) BL: YA.1989.b.2698 Poetry Library

7 28 Seam I edited by David Lightfoot, Robert Etty, Maggie Freeman and Frank Dullaghan. Louth, then Chelmsford, Issue I (1994)- . ISSN: 1345-4993 BL: ZK.9.a.3663 CUL: L727.c.1417 NLS: Il-. (HJ3.2330 SER) TCD: PER 84-179 Poetry Library: 1-6, 8-

729 Second Light Newsletter I edited by Dilys Wood. [London]: Second Light, [No. I, 1997?]-· Anthology: There have been several anthologies associated with the Second Light network, including Myra Schneider and Dilys Wood (eds.), preface by U. A. Fanrhorpe, Parents:

An Anthology qfPoems by Women Writers (Enirharmon, 2000), BL: YK.20oo.a.n673 Website: www.esch.dircon.co.uk/second/second.htm From rhe website: "Second Light is an informal network for women poets, aged around 40 and upwards who are published/beginning to get published/serious about developing rheir work. It aims to promote rhe work of all women poets and also to develop and promote the work of its members. The network offers its members information in particular through a twice yearly newslener which includes reviews of books by women poets including books and pamphlets by members, articles, information about workshops, courses and readings. The newslener also includes rhe winning and commended poems from the Second Light competition. The editor features member poets by invitation in most issues .• Lyn Moir was rhe guest editor for no. 6. Poetry Library: [I] I 3-41 6-71 9-

730 Sepia I edited by Colin Webb. Millbrook near Torpoint, Cornwall: Kawabata Press, No. 1 (1977)-69 [Dec 2002]. ISSN: 0410-n65 Related Imprint: Kawabata Press published collections of poems and short stories and a study of the musician Captain Beefheart, Captain Beqiltart: the man and the music, by Colin David Webb (1987), BL: YM.1987.a.396 BL: P.90I/3086 CUL: L727.c.883 UCL: 1-131 15-69 Poetry Library: [5?]-81 10; 121 lSI 19; 211 30-31; 331 35-40; 43-69

731 Serendipity. Malton: Dales Publishing, 1 (1997). ISSN: 1460-8006 The magazine ofrhe Malton and Ryedale Writers. BL: ZK.9.a.5060

Seshat: cross-cultural perspectives in poetry and philosophy I edited by Terence DuQuesne 732

and Mark Angelo de Brito. London: Seshat, No. I (Spring 1998)-. ISSN: 0961-7523 BL: zC.9.a.5I97 CUL: L727.b.385 NLS: HJ8.I794 PER TCD: PER 88-424 Poetry Library: 1-2

Chapter E: 1976-2000 733 Sharp Edges! edited by James Mavor, Andrew Dorward, John Fraser, Sara Worthington, Ian Robertson, Ian Deary and Andrea Joyce. Edinburgh: Sharp Edges, [I, I983?]-? Associated with Edinburgh University. Photocopied. stapled AS. Contributors include Peter Porter (then a writer in residence at Edinburgh). Andy [i.e. Andrew] Greig. Tom Leonard. Brian McCabe. Ron Butlin. and others. There are also poems by Ian Rankin. later celebrated as the author of the Inspector Rebus novels. James Campbell. the "J.C." of the Timts Literary Supplement. contributes an article on "The Use of Little Magazines' in issue 2. appealing for Scors not to be sentimental when judging their own literature. BL: [I. 19831. [2] (Oct. 19 84) (P.90S/23SJ

734 Sheaf! edited by Mavis Ainsworth, Anne Cluysenaar, and others. Sheffield: English Department, Sheffield City Polytechnic (later, Sheffield Hallam University), Vol. I no. 1 [198o?]-vol. 6 no. 2 (1985); unnumbered issue (1987) Note: Continued as an e-zine edited by Trudi Taylor. e-sheaf, from February 2001 Profiled in: www.e-sheaf.orglindex.htm Website: www.e-sheaf.org/index.htrn The following were also involved editorially: Ruth Bush. Philip Callow. Joy Curtis. Keith Hincliffe. Simon Image. Sue Beverley. Keir Robertson. Jan Tunley. Deborah Randall. Ian McMillan. Joseph Bristow. and John Taylor. Poetry Library: Vol. 3 no. I (1982). vol. 5 no.2-vol. 6 no. 2; unnumbered issue (1987)

735 Shearsman / edited by Tony Frazer. Kuala Lumpur, then Plymouth, then cullompton, then Exeter: Shearsman Books, NO.1 [1981]-8 (1982), New series, NO.1 (1991)- . Note: Shearsman was incorporated with Oasis. the U.S. Atlantic Rtvitw and TtlfBram into Ninth Decade from 198 3-1991. From 1991 Shearsman separated from Ninth Decade (which had become Ttnth Decade) and began a new series. Index: An index of contributors to the first series and a similar index to the second are given at the website Anthology: Tony Frazer (ed.). A Statt oflndtptndtnce (Stride, 1998). BL: YA.2000.a.lS5 22

Related Imprint: Shearsman Books Website: www.shearsman.com/index.htrnl. The magazine Tony Frazer set up after Imprint. From his editorial statement at poetrymagazines.org.uk: "If the journal has a ruling aesthetic. it is one informed by international modernism and by the more radical kinds of poetry that appeared in the USA and the UK in the 1950S and 1960s." Featured poers have included David Jaffin. Emmanuel Hocquard. Marcelin Pleynet. Harry Guest. Peter Dent. Simon Perchik. Andrew Duncan. Clive Faust. Nathaniel Tarn. and Peter Riley. Other poets who have appeared in the magazine include GustafSobin. Guy Birchard. John Levy. Craig Watson. Laurie Duggan. Gael Turnbull, Christopher Middleton. Kelvin Corcoran. Trevor Joyce. Peter Larkin. Frances Presley. Tilla Brading. Ian Davidson. Andy Brown. Rupert M. Loydell. Martin Anderson, Tim Allen, and David Miller. Earlier issues have been digitized and appear on the Poetry Library's magazines site. www.poetrymagazines.org.uk/. while more recent ones appear on the Shears man site itself. BL: 1-3; 5-7; New series. no. 1-. (P.903/I039) CUL: 1-3; 5-7; New series. no. 1- .(L727.b.433) NLS: 1-7. New series. no. 47-. (DJ.m.1279) TCD: 1-7. (PER 90-449) UCL Poetry Library: 3; 5-6; New Series. 1-2; 4; 7-12; 14-38; 40-

736 Sheffield Thursday: literature, art, talk / edited by E.A. Markham. Sheffield: School of Cultural Studies, Sheffield Hallam University; then PAVIC Publications; then SHU Press, No. I (1992)-10 (2000). ISSN: 09 68-0977 Also involved editorially were Sharon Kivland. Sudeep Sen. Margaret Drabble. Mimi Khalvati. Robert Miles. Katie Wales. David Shields. Elaine Bull. Danny Broderick. Wayne Burrows. and Katy Plummer. BL: 1-8. (ZC.9.a.3344) Poetry Library: 1-2; 4-8; 10

737 The Shop: a magazine of poetry ! edited by John Wakeman, Rhiannon Shelley and Hilary Wakeman. Goleen, Co. Cork; Schull, Co. Cork, No. I (Autumn/Winter 1999)-. ISSN: 1393-8681 Note: Later issues have ISBNs John Wakeman. who was a founding editor of The Rialto established this magazine with his co-editors after •

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 emigrating to the Republic ofIreland. BL: ZK.9.a.6827 CUL: Periodicals Dept NLS: HJ8.1069 Teo: PER 102-176 Poetry Library

738 Shopping Music, edited by Andy Johnson. Cambridge: King's College, Cambridge, I (1979) Contributors include Rod Mengham, Anthony Barnett, Andy Johnson, Dave Ward, and Ken Edwards. King's College London, Eric Mottram Archive: 7/580/1 1979

739 Le Shovelle Diplomatique. [U.K.], Issue I (1994) Note: Variant title: Boitt (a cockwtrk whortage) Related Imprint: Le Shovelle Diplomatique also produced a video Riot (1995), a copy of which is held by the Live Art Development Agency Poetry Library: 1

74 0 Shrike, edited by Paul Wright and Jo Mariner. Alpenon: ButcherBird, No. I (1995)-3 [199 8] ISSN: 1360-5275 BL: ZK.9.a.4533 Poetry Library: 1-1

741 Siting Fires: a poetry journal' edited by James Sutherland Smith, Tim Dooley and Matthew Sweeney. Sittingbourne, No. I (19 82)-2 (19 83) UCL:1 Poetry Library: 1-1

742 Skate I edited by Chuck Connor. Haleswonh: Skate Press, then Blistered Fingers Productions. [No. I, 198?-no. 4?, 19 8 3] Poetry Library: [4?]

743 Skoob Review, edited by Lucien Jenkins. London: Skoob Books Publishing, Issue I (1989)-2 (1990) BL: ZC.9.b.4937 Poetry Library: 1

744 Slacker. Paisley: Trinity Press, [No. I, 199 8]-2 (1999). ISSN: 1463-9289 BL: ZK.9.b.I3143 Poetry Library: [Il

745 Slightly Soiled: literary review, edited by Julian Nangle, Timothy Cumming and David Crystal. London, No. I (June 1986)-[no. 5?, 1987?] Contributors include the novelist Alan Sillitoe, the bookseller Bernard Stone, Gavin Ewart, Ruth Fainlight, Ivor Cutler, Roger Garfitt, Peter Redgrove, Matthew Sweeney, Brendan Cleary, Roy Fuller, Peter Porter, Jeremy Reed, and Sean O'Brien (who is interviewed in no. 3/4). BL: I; 3/4; (ZA.9.b.1255) CUL: 1-3/4. (L850.b.647) NLS: 1-3/4. (HP.Ja.1539 PER) Poetry Library: 3/4 (1986H5?l

Slippy See Southfields E758 746 Slipstream: new poetry, fiction, writing' edited by Cathy Cullis and Helen Knibb. Fleet, Issue 1(1996)-4 (1998). ISSN: 14 61- 1643 Poetry Library: 1-1, 4

747 Slow Dancer, edited by John Harvey. London, then Nottingham: Slow Dancer Press, No. I (1977)-30 (Summer 1993). ISSN: 0143-1412 Profiled in: John Harvey, "Last Chance for a Slow Dance", Poetry London, reproduced in full at www.mellotone.co.uk Related Imprint: Slow Dancer Press published many poetry collections, including work by Simon Armitage, Lee Harwood, Libby Houston, and James Schuyler Website: www.mellotone.co.uk From "Last Chance for a Slow Dance", Harvey records: "From the first, there was a strong bias towards American

Chapter E: 1976-2000 poetry, either written by Americans themselves, or by those of us whose work showed, in some respects, an American influence. [... J Slow Dancer favoured poems whose language was direct and colloquial, rather than couched in 'poetic diction,' which were narrative rather than purely lyric (and certainly not epic!) and which eschewed references to Greek deities Or ancient mythologies." The magazine emerged from a series of workshops held by John Harvey, Tina Fulker, Alan Brooks, and Annie Gilligan, themselves influenced by courses held by the Arvon Foundation. Some issues were given over to specific subjects, e.g. no. 15, American issue, guest-edited by Alan Brooks; 27, a Sharon Olds issue; 29, a North American issue, guest-edited by Rhona McAdam. The editor is best known as the author of the crime novels which feature the Nottingham-based detective Charlie Resnick. BL: I: 3-30. (P.901/3145) CUL: 2-30. (L727.C·796) NLS: 2-30. (DJ.m.1619 PER) TCD: 2-30. (PER92-442 1978-1993)

VCL Poetry Library: 1-4: 6-30

748 Smiths Knollt edited by Roy Blackman and Michael Laskey, then Michael Laskey and Joanna Cutts. Woodbridge: JHP Publishing CD., No. I (1991)-. ISSN: 0964-6310 Interview: Michael Laskey, in Portry News the Newsletter of the Portry Socirty, Spring 2006, p.8 Website: Many issues are digitised and available online at www.poetrymagazines.org.uk The name is taken from a lightship moored off East Anglia. Contributors include: Colette Bryce, Amanda Dalton, Anne-Marie Fyfe, Tobias Hill. Mario Petrucci. Neil Rollinson, Jean Sprackland. Andrew Waterhouse. Glyn Wright, Cliff Yates, and others. The co-founding editor Roy Blackman died in 2002. BL: ZC.9.a.30II CUL: 2-. (L727.d·360)

VCL Poetry Library

749 Snake t edited by John Avery, Nick Cook and Anne Loughlin. Sheffield: Snake Press, No.1 (Autumn 1983)-3 (1984). ISSN: 0265-3826 BL: P.gol/3505 CUL: L9gg.q.g61 NLS: 0I.S.7(IO) PER

VCL Poetry Library

750 Snapshots: haiku magazine t edited by John Barlow. Liverpool: Snapshots Press, NO.1 (Jan. 1998)-. ISSN: 1461-0833 Index: Contributors to many issues are listed at the website, issue by issue Related Imprint: Snapshots Press have also published Tangled Hair. individual collections and calendars Website: www.snapshotpress.co.uk BL: ZK.9.a.S860 Poetry Library: I

SODEM See Scribblers of Dubious Editorial Merit E723 SODS See Scribblers of Dubious Editorial Merit E7 2 3 Sofa See Southfields E758 SoFi See Southfields E758 751 Solid Chintz: arts magazine. Guildford: Students Union, University of Surrey, No. I [I978?] Poetry Library

752 Something for Nothing. Cheltenham, No.1 [198-?]-5 [1988?] Poetry Library: 5

753 Songs to the Westering Moon. Weston-super-Mare: Sun and Harvest Publications, [No. I?] (Autumn 1980) Related Imprint: Sun and Harvest Publications also produced Sun & HaTVl'5t Consists of a single folded sheet. Poetry Library: [I?]

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 Soundworks Newsletter: for poetry and health I edited by Patrick

754

Cooper-DuffY. Southampton, [C.I994] According to www.castleo!poetry.com. Patrick CooperDuffY was "born in Kingston, Jamaica of Irish Jamaican ancestry and this is reflected in his poetry. He has a professional background in nursing: psychiatry and learning disabilties.Poetry Library: Dec. 1994

755 The Soup Kitchen I edited by Brendan Cleary and Martin Myers. Newcastle upon Tyne: Bad Seed Press, No. I [198?]. Related Imprint: Bad Seed also published Bad Setds Poetry Library

Soupy See Southfields E758

South: a poetry magazine from the southern counties I edited by Peter

756

Crews, Pam Gidney, Philip Goulding, Joan Wiles, Tony Richards, Stella Davis, Jenny Deagle, John Arnold, Denise Bennett, Jenny Hamlett, ltG. Gregory, Martin Blyth... and others. Wimborne: Wanda Publications, then South, No. I (Apr. 1990)-26 (Oct. 2002). ISSN: 0959-1133 Note: Incorporated Flint from no. I. Incorporated Doors into and out tifDorstt from no. 15 Profiled at: www.poetrymagazines.org.uk Related Imprint: Wanda Publications Website: www.martinblyth.co.uk/South.htm. Some issues have been digitised and appear at www.poetrymagazines.org.uk/ Originally published by the imprint ofWord & Action, a community arts organisation in Dorset, it is notable for selecting poems which are submitted without the name of the poet on them, to avoid bias. Each issue is edited by a different team from a specific regional area. Since 1997 each issue features a southern poet with an essay about him or her and a selection of their poetry. Relaunched in 2003 following the withdrawal of funding for Word & Action. BL: ZC.9.a.2339 CUL: L727.c.qoo NLS: HJ4.1969 SER Poetry Library: 1-8; 15-

757 South East Arts Review I edited by Jose Phillips and Richard Moore, then John Rice. Tunbridge Wells: South East Arts, Issue [1,1977]-23 (Dec.1982). ISSN: 0141-3791 Exhibition Catalogue: Frank Milner (ed.), The Stuckists: Punk Victorian (National Museums Liverpool, 2004), BL: YC.2oos·a.IS79 A magazine that was in more wide-ranging than its title suggests, especially from Summer 1978 when John Rice briefly co-edited with Richard Moore before becoming sole editor in the Winter issue. Contributions included those from Peter France (translating Gennady Aygi), Nicki Jackowska, an article on the "British Poetry Revival, 1965-79- by Barry MacSweeney (Spring 1979), Edwin Morgan, James Berry, "A Survey ofThird World Poetry- by Stewart Brown (Summer 1980), "Dada: My Heart Belongs to Dada- by Lee Harwood (Spring 1981), Fiona Pitt-Kethley, an introduction to the literary history of Zimbabwe by Colin Style, with a selection of Zimbabwean poetry (Summer 1982), and, in the final issue (Dec. 1982) an account of the Outcrowd I Medway poets by Charles Thomson and Prabhu S. Guptara on "Non Anglo-Saxon Attitudes: British Ethnic Minority Literature in English". BL: [3]- (P·421/729) CUL: [I]; 4-23. (L700.C.2I2) NLS: [4]-23. (DJ·&·427 TCD: PER 92-384 UCL:3-23 Poetry Library: [2]; [4]; [6]-[8]; [10]-23

758 Southfields I edited by Raymond Friel and Richard Price, with David Kinloch, Peter McCarey and Donny O'Rourke. London, then Staines, Frome, and Glasgow: Southfields Press, [VoI. I] (I995)-voI. 6 no. 2 (2000) Note: Earlier issues have ISBNs and may be catalogued separately by libraries. Variant titles: SoFi; Soupy: a lad It ma9azint; Stifa: it's divan; Slippy: cartfol now. The first volume was issued with Colour Supplemmt, four colour images made by Edwin Morgan Related Imprint: Southfields Press published individual pamphlet collections by Raymond Friel and Richard Price, and, with Gairfish, the Informationist anthology edited by Price and W. N. Herbert, ContraJ1ow on tht SuptrHi9hway (1994), BL: YK.1996.a.9102. The one-offbroadsheet Southfold was also published by Southfields Press, BL: ZK.9.b.I3410. In association with Au Quai, Southfields issued a supplement in 1998, Cisar Vallejo: Translations, Tran,iformations, Tributes, edited by Richard Price and Stephen Watts, BL: YK.1999.a.377

Chapter E: 1976-2000 Southfields published a range of contemporary poets, often Scottish but not exclusively so. As well as poems (some in translation) there were articles, short fiction and reviews. The first volume had the subtitle Criticism and Celebration, the second Exiles and Emi,gres, and the third City and Light. The column Rmftewshire in Old Machine Code by "Our Special Correspondent" was later developed as part of Richard Price's short story collection ABoy in Summer (n:9, 2002), BL: H.2003/68r. With Verse and Gairjish, Southfields was one of the magazines associated with the Scottish grouping of poets, the Informationists.

761 SOW'S Ear I edited by R. J. Ellis. Stafford: Sow's Ear Press, I (1983)-12 (1992) The first issue of Sow's Ear, "Accessing U.S. Little Magazines - a review of 40 current U.S. Little Magazines and their publishing context", reflects R. J. Ellis's interest as a critic and academic in the field oflittle magazines. Other issues featured a variety of poets, including Allen Fisher, E. A. Markham, James Berry, David Miller, John Levy, Yann Lovelock, John Lucas, and Ian McMillan. R. Brody was also involved editorially. Poetry Library: I; 6--7

BL: ZC.9.a·5380 CUL: [Vol. I]. (1997.8.1834) [Vol. 2]. (199 8 .8.155 2 1; vol. 4 no. I; vol. 6 no. I-nO.2. (L727·C.I303) NLS: OJ.S.79I PER TCO: Vol. 4 nO.I; vol. 6 no.!. (PER 89-186) UCL: [Vol. 3l-vol. 6 no. 2 Poetry Library

762 Space Limited: lighthearted medium for aspiring wordsmiths I [edited by Ian Templeton?]. [Storrington?], [No. I, 1998?]-[7?] (Sept.IOct. 1999)

Southfold See Southfields E75 8

Note: May!June 1999 is also numbered "2" and Sept./Oct. 1999 is also numbered" 3".

759 South West Review I edited by Owen Davis then Lawrence Sail. Exeter: South West Arts, No. I (1977)-25 (May 1985). ISSN: 0142-9124 Anthology: Lawrence Sail (ed.), South west Review: A Celebration (South West Arts, 1985), BL: YC.I986.a·3I56 BL: 2-25. (P.80I/3 I82 ) CUL: 8-25. (L7 27·C079 0) NLS: 8-25. (HJ2.220 PERl TCD: 8-25. (PER 91-512) UCL:I; 5-7· Poetry Library: 5; 20-25

7 60 South Yorkshire Writer I edited by Maureen Crosby, Pete DeVeaux, Nigel Green, Pete Haythorne, Wendy Richmond, Rob Payne, Fiona Peart, Scott Rayner, Alison Ross, Stan Cummings, Joe Handley, Marie Jones, Hugh Waterhouse and others. Sheffield: South Yorkshire Writer (SYW), I [198?]-IO (199 1) Note: Variant title: Sywriter. The last issue of South Yorkshire Writer was also the first issue of The Cutting Room BL: 10. (ZC·9· a .2988 ) Poetry Library: 5 (1989)-10

BL: 2-4; (6?] May!June 1999. (7?] Sept./Oct. 1999· (ZK.9· b. I22 7S)

763 Spark: the Cambridge arts magazine I edited by Alice Allen, Motoko Rich, Jane Menczer, Martin Hodgson, Meredith Pickford, Sophie Page, Cam Goddard, Julia Bullock, Andrea Brady... and others. Cambridge: Clare College, Cambridge, Vol. I no. I (Easter 1993)-? Note: Numbering ofissues is not consistent across the set. CUL: I (Easter 1993),1 (Lent 1994), I Michaelmas (1994), I [1995],8 (Feb. 1997). (Cam.b·41.59) Poetry Library: Vol. 1 no. I; vol. 3 no. I; vol. 4 no. 1

764 Speakeasy I edited by Martin Edwards and Ian Duckett. Norwich then Dunston, near Kings Lynn: Overdrawn Publications, Issue I [197?]-issue 7 (Sept. 1983) NLS: 2-7. (HP.Sm.324) Poetry Library: 7

765 Special Twenty. London, then Watford, No. 1-8 [199-?] Poetry Library: 1-3; 5-6; 8

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 766 Spectacular Diseases I edited by Paul Green. Peterborough, No.1 (1976)-U (1999). ISSN: 0144-9443 Note: Gaps of several years separate issues so the magazine may still be publishing. Related Imprint: Spectacular Diseases also publish individual poetry collections and issued Loot. It published the annual of current French writing in English Sirit d'ecriture, edited by Rosmarie Waldrop, from issue no. I ('986) to no. 5 (1991), before publication was taken on by the American experimental imprint Burning Deck. It has been a UK distributor for Burning Deck Website: www.indigogroup.co.uk/llpp/spectac.html Publishing experimental texts. NO.4 was a Latin American issue, guest edited by Paul Buck. No. II was a festschrift for Fanny Howe. BL: 1-9. (CUp.818/31j; II (YK.2ooo.a.4141) CUL: 1-9: II. (L727.C.667) NLS: DJ.I.194 PER TCD: 1-8. (PER94-598 1976-198S) UCL Poetry Library: 4: 7

Sphinx: a journal for archetypal psychology and the arts, edited by Noel

769

Cobb and Eva Loewe. London: The London Convivium for Archetypal Studies, NO.1 (1988)-5 (1993), ISSN: 0953-6582 BL: 1-3. (ZK.9.a.IOo9 ) CUL: 1-2. (LgoO.C.619) NLS: 1-2. (DJ.5.675 PER) Poetry Library

770 The Spice-Box, edited by Malcolm Napier. KnaphiIl: Aramby Publishing, Issue 1 (1998)-2 (1999). ISSN: 0959-4663 Note: Continues: Wire Poetry Magazine Poetry Library

771 Spindrift, edited by Paul Smith. Canterbury: Rutherford College, University of Kent at Canterbury, NO.1 [197?]-3 [1978?]. NO.3 is a special Christopher Middleton issue.

767 Spectrum, edited by Julian Ciepluch, Chris Bendon, Kenneth Livingstone and Sue Moules. Lampeter: Spectrum, Vol. 1 (Autumn 1982)-vol. 6 (1985). ISSN: 0264-II94 Related Imprint: Spectrum published a number of individual collections, e.g Norman Jope's Spoil (1989), BL: YC.1990.a.1887 With a particular Anglo-Welsh focus and in some issues a Children's Section. BL: P.901/3430 CUL: L727.C.829 Poetry Library

768 Spectrum, edited by S. A. [i.e. Stuart] Paterson and G. J. [i.e. Gerry] Cambridge. Kilmarnock, Ayrshire: Kilmarnock North-West Writers' Group, Issue 1 [I990?]-3 [1992] BL: ZK.9.b.4488 Poetry Library: 2-3

CUL: 3. (Lg99·b.I·SI6) UCL: 1-2 Poetry Library: 1-3

Spindrift: poems by Scarborough Poetry Workshop' edited by Peggy

772

Loosemore Jones. Pickering: Scarborough Poetry Workshop, [No.] 1 (1977)-[no.] 3 (1983) BL: 2-3. (P.901/324I) NLS: 2-3. (HP.sm.147) UCL: 1-2 Poetry Library: 2-3

SPLASH See Scottish Poetry Library Newsletter E7 1 9 773 Spokes, edited by Julius Smit, Colin Blundell, A.L. Hendriks, A.J. Obrist, Donald Atkinson, John Wells-Deamer, Alistair Wisker and Gina Wisker. Flitwick: Spokes, NO.1 (Apr. 1985)-28 (1996). ISSN: 0268-294X Note: The title on nos.I8-2o is New Spokes

Chapter E: 1976-2000 BL: 1-26. (ZC.9.a.6I9) CUL: L727.C.I064 NLS: HJ8.I267 PER UCL: IS Poetry Library: S-27

Began as a magazine edited by Donald Measham and Tony Rees, funded by the profits of a Writers' Conference at Madock College. No. So is an anthology issue, 20 Years of Twentitth Century Poary, ed. Donald Measham and Bob Windsor.

774 Spout: b&w poetry magazine. Birstall: SPOUT Publications, [No. I, I99?]-7 (199 6)

SL: P.90I/3603 NLS: Winter 1983-No. 20 (Spring 1991). Lacking: Summer 1987. (DJ,m.ls68 PER) UCL Poetry Libraty: [2?] (1983/1984), [37], S-

Produced by the Birstall Writers, and" ... the magazine of the Kirklees Writing in the Community Project." Poetry Library: 4 (1994)-7

775 Springboard: writing to succeed I edited by Leo Brooks, Barbara Dickinson, Ann Froggatt, Sandra Lieberman and Fiona MallinRobinson. Prestwich, then Great Wakering: No. I [1990]- ISSN: 09 66-5935 Note: A supplement, The Curatt's EB9, was also produced BL: ZK.9.a.242o Poetry Library: 10: 16-44: 46

77 6 Springfield Works I edited by Keiron Brown. [UK]: Springfield Hospital, [No. I] (197 8) Poetry Library

777 Stand and Deliver: new poetry from Newcastle I edited by Graham C. Brown. Whitley Bay: Wordsmith and Jones Publications, No. I (1996)-6 (1999) Poetry Library: 1-4: 6

778 Staple I edited by Donald Measham, Tony Rees, Bob Windsor, David Duncombe, John Sewell, Ann Atkinson and Elizabeth Barrett. Matlock, then Sheffield: School of Humanities, Derbyshire School of Higher Education, then Staple, [No. I, 1983]-. ISSN: 0266-4410 Profiled at: www.poettymagazines.org.uk Website: Some issues have been digitised and are available at www.poettymagazines.org.uk Related Imprint: Staple First Editions

779 Staple Diet I edited by Richard Caddel. Durham: Pig Press, NO.1 (Jan. 1985)-18 (Sept. 1986); Special Issue (1992) Interview: with Richard Caddel in Giirtschacher 2 Related Imprint: Pig Press published a number of individual collections by authors associated with the magazine Each issue consisted of work by a single poet. Featured poets included Lee Harwood, Tom Raworth, Guy Birchard, Michael Heller, Jane Augustine, Ken Edwards, Billy Mills, Elaine Randell, Robert Sheppard, Aidan Semmens, Brent MacKay, Andrew Lawson, and John Cayley. A Special Issue, a poem for Basil Bunting by Eric Mottram, was issued in 199 2 . SL: 4: 6-g: I2-1S: 17. (ZA.9.b.970). Special Issue. (YD.200S·b.I33) CUL: L718.b.143 NLS: DJ.m.1429 UCL: 1-8, 10-18 Poetry Library

780 Stardancer I edited by Chael Graham, Michael S. Prochak, John D. Tatter and Warren Werner. Oxford (Ohio), then Brooklyn (New York) and Colchester: Ampersand Press, No. I (Spring 1976)-7 (1983). ISSN: 0363-8278 Note: The imprint is also given as "& Press". Essentially a US magazine with what appears to be only a passing connection to England. Various publishing locations in the US over the years. No. S/6 is a translation issue. CUL: 7 (1983). (L999·q·I384) UCL: I New York Public Library: JFL 93-406 Poetry Library: S/6 (1980)

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 781 Start: Stoke magazine of the arts I edited by Jeff Hartnett, Roland Bligh, Patrick Regan, Matthew Spitties, Paul Smith, Sally Martin and Charles Mansfield. Burslem: Start Press, No. I [1978?]-19 (Jan/Feb. 1985). ISSN: 0267-2502 BL: 19. (ZC·9.a.1656) UCL: II Poetry Library: 2-3; 5-6; 8-10; 18

786 Stomp Magazine. Hull: Mouldy Cheese Publications, No. I [198?]-3 (1985) Poetry Library: 3

787 Stone Ferry Review I edited by Sean O'Brien and Bruce Woodcock. Hull, No. I (Spring 1978)-2 (1978) Contributors include: Piott Summer, Andrew Motion, Pete[r] Didsbury, Douglas Dunn, and others.

782

Station Identification + Poetic Injustice I edited by Ann. Norton, No. I

BL: ZA.9.a.l0609 Poetry Library: 2

[197?]-4 [1978?]

788

Note: No surname is given for the ediWr. Poetry Library: 4

The Steeple: Ireland's new poetry magazine. Cork: Three Spires Press, No. I

783

[199?]-2 (1992) Note: NO.2 has an ISBN: 1-87354-8°5-2 Related Imprint: Three Spires published several short collections of poetry including Pattick Galvin's Tht Madman of Corle (1991), BL: YA.1998.a.l0396 Poetry Library: 2

784 Still: a journal of short verse I edited by Ai Li. London: The Empty Press, Vol. I no. I (1997H ISSN: 1365-3334 Website: www.aili.co.uk/ BL: Vol. 1 no. I-VOl. 5 no. 4 (2002). (ZC.9.a.4787) Poetry Library

785 The Stinging Fly I edited by Aoife Kavanagh and Declan Meade; poetry editor, Eabhan Nf ShUileabMin. Dublin, Issue I [1998?]-. ISSN: 1393-5690 Website: www.stingingfIy.org/ With a particular emphasis on the short story, but not exclusively so. Relaunched in Summer 2005. BL: ZK.9.b.I2215 CUL: L727.b.397.1 NLS: H]8.2020 SER TCD: PER 8!r764 UCL Poetry Library: 1-7, !r

Stone Soup: literary magazine (casopis za knjizevnos) I edited by Igor

Klikovac, Ken Smith, Srdja Pavlovic and Vesna Domeny-Hardy. London, NO.1 (Mar. 1995)-3 (1997). ISSN: 1357-5287 Printed bilingually, in English and the languages of the former Yugoslavia BL: ZC.9.a.4237 Poetry Library: 1-3

789 Stonechat I edited by Jon Flint and Krishnan Venkatesh. [Cambridge], Issue I (1980) CUL: L999.b.l.686 NLS: HP4.83.738 PER TCD: PER 90-388 Poetry Library: 1

790 Story and Stanza I edited by Alex Watson, George Bowie, Margaret Alexander, Alistair Currie and Andrew Patrizio. Dunfermline: Woodmill High School, No. I (Apr. 1977)-? CUL: 11)-19. (L727.C.1294) NLS: P.la.6259 PER Poetry Library: 10-12

791 Straight Lines I edited by Robin Robertson, James Lasdun, Mark Hutchinson, Steven Buckley, Giles Leaman, Jane Heather and Kimberley Larsen. London, No. I (1978)-7 [198?]. ISSN: 0142-7431

Chapter E: 1976-2000 Note: NO.3 appears not to have been published BL: P.903/565 CUL: L727.b.229.1 NLS: D).m.75(2) PER UCL Poetry Library: 1-2: 4-7

Strange Fruit: the Humanities Dept., North Staffordshire Poly Literary Review I edited by R. J. Ellis. 792

Stafford: Humanities Dept., North Staffordshire Polytechnic, No. I [1977]-9 (1982) Note: No.8 was described as also Strange Lime Fruit Stone no. 3 and Limestone no. 13 Poetry Library: 9

793 Strange Lime Fruit Stone I edited by Geoffrey Adkins, Ted Burford and R. J. Ellis. Stafford: Dept. of Humanities, North Staffordshire Polytechnic; and London: The City Literary Institute, No. I [197?]-3 (Winter 1981 ) Note: NO,3 was described as also Strange Fruit no. 8 and Limestone no. 13. A supplement, The British Little Magazine Scent: A Literary Mosaic, was published in 1982, UCL: Poetry Store Quartos ELL CUL: L727·b.262 NLS: 2-3. (HP2.84·3106 PER) TCD: 2-3. (PER 96-217) UCL: 2-3 Poetry Library: 3

794 Strange Mathematics I edited by Jeremy Silver, Penelope Toff and John Wright. London: The No Such Press, No. I (1982)-7 (1984). ISSN: 0263-0648 Note: Continues: Ninth Wave Related Imprint: No Such Press published several poetry collections including Mark Williams's The Book of Norman (1983), BL: X.955/2452 BL: 2; 3; 5; 7· (P·973i371) CUL: 1-3. (L999· b .1·912 ) NLS: 1-3. (HP4.85·1148 PER) UCL Poetry Library: 1-5; 7

795 Strawberry Fare: St. Mary's College literary magazine: articles, poetry, stories, interviews I edited by John Iddon. Twickenham: English Dept., St. Mary's College, Autumn 1984-Autumn 1989 A college magazine with substantial essays, interviews and a go·getting attitude to contributors, who include Melvyn Bragg (interviewed in the first issue), John Wain, Tom Stoppard (interviewed), Peter Porter, David Lodge (interviewed), Craig Raine, Gavin Ewart, Seamus Heaney, Jonathan Miller, Richard Ellman, Dannie Abse, Bernard Bergonzi, Terry Eagleton, Philip Hobsbaum, George MacBeth, Edwin Morgan, Beryl Bainbridge, Alan Brownjohn, D. J. Enright, Michael Holroyd, Blake Morrison, Peter Redgrove, and others. BL: Autumn 1981-Autumn 1986. (ZK.9.a.41). Autumn 1987-Autumn 1989. (8474.050100) CUL: Autumn 1985, Autumn 1986. (L999.c.3.Il34) NLS: Autumn 1985, Autumn 1986. (DJ.m.761(7) PER) TCD: Autumn 1985-Autumn 1989. (PER 91-528) Poetry Library: Autumn 1984

796 Stride I edited by Rupert Loydell. London, then Crewe, then Exeter: Stride, [No.] 1(1982)-37 (1995). ISSN: 0262-9267 Note: Continued as an e·zine from the Stride website Index: A contents listing of the first eighteen issues is given in no. 19. Related Imprint: Stride has published many poetry collections as well as art, music and cultural criticism Anthology: Rupert M. Loydell (ed.), Ladder to the Next Floor: Stride magazine 1-33, Salzburg: University of Salzburg Press, 1993, BL: X.0909/6Il(83) Website: www.stridemagazine.co.uk/ Special issues included Alan Gamer (no. 8), Brian Louis Pearce (no. 9), David H. W. Grubb (no. 29). No. 24/25, 'The Serendipity Caper', was a prose issue featuring Brian Louis Pearce, Ian Robinson, David Miller, Gary Boswell, Martin A. Hibbert, A.C. Evans, Thomas Wiloch, and others. Chris Mitchell was the guest editor for no. 33)1" i.e. no. 34, (the numeration changed in reference to the speed of the Long Playing record, the issue having a particular focus on music). Graham Palmer and Gary Boswell were also involved editorially in the magazine. BL: I: 5: 7: II-13: 15: 19-23. (P·90l/3298) CUL: 3-27. (L727.c.I097) NLS: HJ4.613 PER UCL:3 Poetry Library: 2-33

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 797 Subvoicive I [edited by Bob Cob bing and Lawrence Upton?]. Sutton: Sub Voicive Poetry, No. I [I99?]-'

800 SuperReal: the British surreal journal I edited by Patricia Scanlan. London,

Website: pages.britishlibrary.net/svp/

Note: Variant subtitles: the Britishjoumal qfsurrtalism; imalles and imagination: rqIexes qfthefoture. Three issues were produced, numbered 0-2 (rather than 1-3). Issue 2 is referred to as vol. 2.

Issued as A4 stapled booklets to accompany the Subvoicive readings, taking place in central London. It is likely that earlier series of these exist but no holdings are known. Subvoicive organises occasional colloquia on contemporary poetry and practice and is also associated with the experimental poetry publisher Writers Forum. Form Books issued Salutr I Vasr I Circumstance (London, 1995) to commemorate Brian Coffey's Subvoicive reading on 29 March 1994, UCL: Poetry Store Boxes For: COF BL: 4 (Kathleen Fraser and Peter Riley); 8 (Fiona Templeton and Stephen Rodefer>; I2 (Anthony Rudolf, Ifigenija Simonovic). (ZA9.a.I2213); 8a (Lawrence Upton) (yA.1999.b.1877); 8b (Lawrence Upton and Bob Cobbing) (YA.1999·b.1880)

798 Sun & Harvest. Weston-super-Mare: Sun and Harvest Publications, No. I [197?]-I2 (1980) Related Imprint: Sun and Harvest Publications also published Songs to the Wmmng Moon Each issue consists of a single folded sheet. Poetry Library: 10; I2

Sunk Island New Writing See Sunk Island ReviewE799 799 Sunk Island Review I edited by Michael Blackburn. Lincoln: Sunk Island Publishing, No. I (1989}-10 (1995). ISSN: 0955-9 647 Note: Variant title: Sunk Island New Writing. Later issues have ISBNs. Sometimes with a title for the issue, e.g. no. 6, Camalle: new writingfrom Europe,; no. 8, Schopmhautr's Blues (which contains an interview with Thomas A. Clark); no. 9, Outsiders; no. 10: Splem. Sylvia Blackburn, Robert Etry,- and David Lightfoot were also involved editorially. BL: I; 4-6. (ZC.9.a.2236) CUL: L996.C.279 NLS: 1-9. (HJ4.1609 PER) TCD: 2-9. (PER 95-706 198(}-1995) UCL Poetry Library: I; 3-6; 8-10

Issue 0 (1992)-2 (1994). ISSN: 0966-7830

Issue 1 includes a feature on Edouard Roditi. Helen Cooper, Alex Sapirstein, Diane Osgood, Andrzej Borkowski, and Katrina Lindesay were also involved editorially. BL: ZK.g.b.4716 UCL Poetry Library

801

Survivors Poetry Newsletter

[U.K.]: No. I (Oct 1998)-8 (June 2000) Continued by: Portry Express BL: ZK.9.b.2OO17

The Swansea Review: poetry criticism - prose I edited by N. H. Reeve,

802

then Glyn Pursglove, Judith Stevens, Caroline George, Marie-Luise Kohlke and Alex Cadogan. Swansea: Department of English, University of Wales Swansea, NO.1 (Apr. 1986)-. ISSN: 026g-8374 The Swansea RtvitW began as a journal devoted solely to ·criticism and English studies' but with issue no. 8 its focus changed to include poetry. There has been a Henry Vaughan feature (edited by Anne Cluysenaar and Glyn Pursglove), a Peter Russell issue and a Dylan Thomas issue. BL: ZC.9.a.3837 CUL: L700.d.29 NLS: HJ4.1567 Teo: 2-. (PER85-S16) UCL: 13 Poetry Library: 8-16; 18-

803 SYC N ewsheet I edited by Simon Pitt, Gary Boswell and Jill Moore. Alsager: SYC Publications, No. I [198?]-IO [1984?]. Related imprint: SYC Publications published Syddines and, for example, Simon Pitt's short collection Attack of the Giant Cheest Sandwich (1986), BL: YC.1987.a.7926 Poetry Library: 8; 10

Chapter E: 1976-2000 804 Sydelines I edited by Simon Pitt, Gary Boswell and Jill Moore. Alsager: SYC Publications, [No.] 1 [198?]-6 (1983) Note: [No.) 3 has ISBN 0"-95 0 7 2 5 1- 1-0. Related Imprint: SYC Publications published SYC Newsfm! and, for example, Gary Boswell's Ear to a Muse (1980), BL:

X·902 /57 0 4 Birmingham University: 2 (p PR 122 5) Poetry Library: 3; 6

80 5 Sylva: the magazine of new poetry I edited by Catherine Roberts. Cardiff,

TCO: 3. (PER 89-818) Poetry Library: 1-3

Sywriter See South Yorkshire Writer E760 808 Syzygy I edited by Ray Cooke and Paul Lamprill. Reading: Centra LitGroup, then Syzygy Publications, NO.1 (1979)-3 (1980). ISSN: 0143-1064 Adrian Caesar, Bruce Thomas, and Richard Matthewman were also editorially involved after the first issue. BL: P.901/3179 Poetry Library: 2

No. I (1993) Poetry Library: 1

Symphony: a magazine of Christian poetry I edited by Keith Barrett,

806

Ernest W. Bacon, Philip Tait, David G. Preston and Valerie Tait. Bristol, then Reading, then Wembley: Bemerton Press, NO.1 (Spring 197 6)-21. NO.1 [i.e. 22] (1986)-no. 2 [i.e. 50] (1995). ISSN: 03 08-45 66 Note: After no. 21, numbered as no. 1-3 (1986), no. 1-3 (1987), etc. BL: P.901/3033 Poetry Library: 13 (1982)-21; no. 1 [i.e. 22) (1986), no. 3

809 Tabla I edited by Steve Ellis and Emma Aylett. Aylesbury, then London: The Tabla Writing Collective, Issue [I, 1992]-6 (1997). ISSN: 1462-4842 Note: Continued by: The Tabla Book of New Verse Website: www.bris.ac.uk/english/journals/tabla From the website: "named after the traditional Indian drum-set which, with its ability to yield subtle variations of tone and timbre, offered the editors a metaphor for the kind of poem they hoped to hit upon. The logo represents the bowl-shaped and cylindrical drums of the tabla transformed into dancing typography." Steve Ellis's name is also given as S. J. Ellis and Stephen James Ellis. He is now known simply as Stephen James.

[i.e. 241 (1986)-no. 2 [i.e. sol (1995)

Symtex & Grimmer: poems in English, German and other notational systems I edited by Chris

BL: 6. (ZK.9.a.5880) Poetry Library

807

Jones, Alistair Noon, and Paul Cooke. Berlin and Banburgh, then St. Andrews, Oxford and Birmingham: ZZZg! Press, Issue I (Spring 1995)-3 (Jan. 199 8). ISSN: 13 68- 88 47 Note: Variant subtitle: a ma9azine of contemporary porny. Contributors include Brigitte Lange (translated by Mitch Cohen), Catherine Bowles, whose manifesto in the third issue suggests a reunion between the avant-gard.e and the mainstream, Peter Finch, Brendan McMahon. Giles Goodland, Paula Claire. GeotfStevens, Johan de Wit, and

810 The Tabla Book of New Verse I edited by Stephen James. London, then Bristol: Tabla, Dept. of English, University of Bristol, 1998-2001; 2004. ISSN: 1462-5016 Note: Continues: Tabla. Suspended after the 2004 edition, but with the prospect of restarting at some point in the furure. Website: www.bris.ac . uk/english/journals/tabla BL: ZK.9.b.5880 CUL: 1999. (L727·d.297)

BL: 1 (Spring 1995); 3 (Jan. 1998 ). (ZK·9· b . 1264 6)

8Il Tak Tak Tak. Nottingham: Tak Tak Tak, Issue [I] (1987)-6 (1993). ISSN: 095 2-94 Il

CUL: 3. (Periodicals Opt.) NLS: 3. (HJ8.1 82 3 PER)

Nate: Audio cassettes were included with issues 2 and 4. Related Imprint: Tak Tak Tak published a novel by Roger

others.

British Poetry Magazines 1914-2000 Wakeling, The Danillinil God (1991), BL: YK.I992.a.2s88, Jeff Nuttall's biography ofLoI Coxhill, The Bald Soprano (1989), BL: YC.I990.a.6878, several audio cassettes, and Ted Milton's Lonlles de Louanllts [1988], BL: YC.I989.a.96S2. Website: There was a website at www.taktaktak.com between 2002 and 2004, which has been archived at web.archive.org and gives futther details of the magazine and the press

Yusuf, Seamus Heaney, Katie Donovan, Bernard O'Donoghue, Sheenagh Pugh, Michael Glover, Myra Schneider, David Han, Samuel Menashe, Patrick Ryan, and others. Poetry Library: 3 (1995)-4/5 [I997?]

81S Tangier 1edited by John Hughes. Belfast, NO.1 [1983?]

Edited anonymously. Texts and images by perhaps more confrontational artists and writers give this magazine an edgy atmosphere. For issue 3 a larger sans-serif font was used, with a look and tone a little reminiscent of Blast. Contributors particularly associated with the magazine include Tim Brown, Ted Milton, Andrew Clay, Karl Blake, Tom Hopkins, and Wayne Summers. Others include Jeff Nuttall, James Keery, RupenLoydell, RogerWakeling, lohan de Wit, Peter Plate, Keith Jafrate, and Ann Quin.

816 Tangled Hair: an international journal of contemporary tanka 1edited

BL: [I]; 3; 6. (ZK.9.a.uI9) Poetry Library: 1-2; 4

Related Imprint: Snapshots Press have also published Snapshots, individual collections and calendars Website: www.snapshotpress.co.uk

812 Talus 1edited by Hanne Bramness, Shamoon Zamir, Stephen Want, Marzia Balzani and Hans Herbjornsrud. London: Dept of English, King's College London, University of London, No. I (1987)-9/10 (1997). ISSN: °9S 1- 628X BL: 1-7; 9/10. (ZK.9.a.782) CUL: 1-8. (L700.C.401) NLS: 1-8. (HI8.uso PER) TCD: 1-8. (PER 92-35 1987-1994) UCL Poetry Library: 1-2; 5-7

813 Tandem: the City University & Goldsmiths' College Writers' . Workshops 1edited by Eva Tucker. London: City University & Goldsmiths' College Writers' Workshop, No. I (1979)-2 (1981) Note: NO.2 was a Festival of the Ciry of London issue. Poetry Library

814 Tandem 1edited by MichaelJ. Woods. Barbourne, No. I [199?]-' ISSN: 1360-S267 Website: www.cipheratts.com/tandem/index.html Contributors include: Carol Ann DuffY, Jackie Kay, Ragnar Stromberg, Jo Shapcott, Barry Fantoni, Linda France, Pete Morgan, Matthew Sweeney, Benjamin Zephaniah, Sujata Bhatt, Stephen Knight, Judith Kazantzis, Muhammad

Poetry Library

by John Barlow. Liverpool: Snapshot Press, No. 1(1999)-3 (2001). ISSN: 1465-0363

BL: ZK.9.a.66rs Poetry Library

817 Tears in the Fence 1edited by David Caddy. Stourpaine, near Blandford Forum, No. I (Sept 1984)-. ISSN: 0266-5816 Note: Variant subtides: a lituary mallazine for the Green Movement; poetry prose Ilraphics; poetry, revitws, stories, art, non.liction, intmitws, revitws Related Imprint: Tears in the Fence have also published individual poetry collections, e.g. Monique Caddy's A Writers Weekend (1994), BL: YK.I994.a.I22IO Owen Davis, Paul Donnelly, Sarah Hopkins, Brian Hinton, and Jonathan Ward have also been involved editorially. BL: P.90r/368S CUL: L7I8.b.206 NLS: HJ9.2287 SER UCL: 1-3; 5; 7Poetry Library: 2 [198S?l-

818 Tees Valley Writer 1edited by Derek Gregory. Middlesborough, Vol. 1 no. 1 (Summer 1990)-no. II (1995). ISSN: 0959-7 808 Heather Bennett, Andy Croft, Carol Rumens, Peter Walker, and Fred D'Aguiar were also involved editorially. BL: Vol. I no. 2 (ZC.g.a.2672) UCL Poetry Library: Vol. I no. I-no. 10

Chapter E: 1976-2000 81 9 Telegram: poetry fiction reviews comment / edited by Ian Robinson and John Stathatos. London: Oasis Books and Oxus Press, NO.1 (1980)-4 (1982). ISSN: 0261-1260 Related imprint: Oasis Books also published Oasis, Ninth Decade and many poetry collections. Oxus Press published the pamphlet collection by Nathaniel Tarn, Weekends in Mexico (1982), BL: X.9S8/173I7, as well as Nassos Vayenas's Biography and other poems, translated from the Modern Greek by John Stathatos (1979), BL: X.909/43981, and other collections BL: 1. (P.901/3270) UCL Poetry Library

822 Temenos Academy Review / edited by Kathleen Raine, and then Grevel Lindop. London: The Temenos Academy, [No.] 1 (1998)-. ISSN: 1461-779X Note: Continues: Temenos. Index: A contents listing, issue by issue, is given at the website Website: www.temenosacademy.org BL: P.901/3280 CUL: P400.C.I20 NLS: HJ4.I924 TCD: PER 72-749 Poetry Library

The official magazine of the Farnworth Writers.

823 The Tempest / edited by Hilary Lester, Michael Paraskos, Benedict Read, Heidi Reitmaier, Tom Steele, Rob Stone, Rebecca Stott and Urszula Szulakowska. Leeds: New Leeds Arts Club, No. I/2 (1992/1993)-4 (1994, ISSN: 0967-5388

TYPewritten AS format.

Note: Variant title: The Tempest ofueds

BL: P.90I/30I6 Poetry Library: 12 (1978)-14; 16; 18; 20

BL: ZK.9.b.788o Poetry Library: 1/2

821 Temenos: a review devoted to the arts of the imagination / edited by

824 Tenth Decade / edited by Tony Frazer, Ian Robinson and Robert Vas Dias. London: Shearsman Books, Oasis Books, and Permanent Press, No. 12 (1990)-14 (1991). ISSN: 0264-6773

Tell Tale: stories and poems for family reading / edited by R. E. Harvey and

820

M. G. Harvey. Bolton, No. I (May 197 6)-39 (Spring 1995). ISSN: 03 08-444 2

Kathleen Raine, Philip Sherrard, Keith Critchlow and Brian Keeble. Dulverton: Watkins, NO.1 (1981)-13 (1992). ISSN: 0262-45 24 Note: Continued by: Temenos Academy Review Index: A contents listing, issue by issue, is given at the website Profiled in: Gilrtschacher 1 Interview: with Kathleen Raine in Gilrtschacher I Website: www.temenosacademy.org BL: P.901/3280 CUL: P400.c.I20 NLS: HJ3.7S4 PER TCD: PER 91-'-3; 5; 8-

The Toadbird See The Old Police Station E556 833 Tongue to Boot I edited by Miles Champion. London, NO.1 (1995)-3 (1996) Tongue to Boot brought together various British and American experimental poets, including Charles Bernstein, Tom Raworth, Fanny Howe, Rae Armantrout, Caroline Bergvall, Ted Greenwald, and Ulli Freer. UCL Poetry Library

T.O.P.S. See The Old Police Station E556 834 Totentanz I edited by D. Belton. West Croydon, NO.1 [1991?] Poetry Library

835 Tracks I edited by John F. Deane and Jack Harte. Clondalkin, Co. Dublin, then Drogheda, Co. Louth, then Dublin: Aquila (Ireland), then Daedalus Press, NO.1 (1982)-11 (1996). ISSN: 0790-02IX Note: Daedalus Press was the publisher from no. 6 onwards. Profiled in: Profiled in: Tom Clyde, Irish Literary Magazines: an outline history and descriptive bibliography (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 2003), BL: 2725·g·3414 Related Imprint: Aquila (Ireland) also published Padraig J. Daly's A Celibate Affair (1984), BL: YC.1987.a.>'333, while Daedalus Press published collections such as Between: Stlated Ponns '1fA,gnes Nemes Nagy, trans. Hugh Maxton (1988), BL: YK.1992.a.6145

BL: ZC.9.a.l109 CUL: 1-2; 4-5; 10. (L7>'7.C.I>.05) NLS: 1-2; 4-5. (OJ.s.56 PER) TCO: Per 90-420 Poetry Library: 1-3; 5-8; Io-II

835a Transit I edited by Kevin Ring. Binley Woods, nr. Coventry: Beat Scene, NO.1 (Spring 1993)- . Website: www.beatscene.net A sister publication of Beat Scene, devoted to the writing of the Beats. BL: 1-2; 4-15. (Pressmark pending) UCL: 3,4.

836 Trap-door I edited by Anne McGrath and Peter Overton. Bolton: [Extrance?], NO.1 [198?]-3 [1989?] Poetry Library: 3

837 Tremblestone I edited by Kenny Knight. Plymouth, NO.1 (1999)-. ISSN: 1463-9 181 Poetry Library: 1-

Trends: the Paisley College of Technology literary magazine I edited 838

by Konrad Hopkins, Nigel Malin and Ronald van Roekel. Paisley: Paisley College of Technology, Vol. 1 no. 1 (1977)-vol. 5 no. 10 (1984) Note: Parallel numbering, so that vol. 5 no. 10 is actually the tenth issue of the entire run, rather than the tenth issue of the fifth volume Vol. >. no. 4 included a feature on Dutch Flemish poetry, guest-edited by Theo Hermans. BL: P.901/1828 CUL: L727.C.1231 NLS: HJ3.675 PER UCL Poetry Library: Vol. 1 no. I-VOl. 2 no. 2; vol. 4 no. 1

Ot!ane was the poetry editor, Harte the fiction. After the fifth number of this basically annual magazine Dean edited solo. Contributors included Seamus Heaney, Pat Boran, R. S. Thomas, Daniel Berrigan, Selima Hill and, fiction-wise, Pat McCabe, John Banville, and others. NO.7 was a Thomas Kinsella issue. Richard Murphy and John Montague were also featured in the magazine. There was an emphasis on translation from Eastern Europe and Scandinavia, with no. 4 a collection by the Swedish poet Tomas Transtriimer

839 Trixie. London: Ampersand, NO.1 [1994?]

(trans. D